Moan: anonymous essays on female orgasm - Emma Koenig
Emma Koenig

Moan: anonymous essays on female orgasm - Emma Koenig

Vezi magazinul Libris
  • 3 stele, bazat pe 1 voturi

Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

What would you want them to know? In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter Imagine you could give an essay entitled How to Make Me Come to a past, present or future sex partner, free of judgment or repercussion.

In this book inspired by Emma Koenig's wildly popular website, a diverse collective of women do just that.

Emma Koenig was inspired to answer this question after a truly frustrating sexual experience with a partner.

As she says, The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying details: He thought I had an orgasm.

I hadn't.

She knew she couldn't be the only woman to have been mystified by an experience such as this, and so her Tumblr, How to Make Me Come, was born as a safe space for women to talk honestly and openly.

The website touched a major chord.

It received tons of press and garnered over a million page views in a month.

And now, a broad range of the best of these anonymous essays have been collected into Moan .

The ways through which women achieve sexual pleasure are often ignored, devalued, or misunderstood.

Moan tackles the ideas surrounding the sometimes elusive orgasm head on.

Here is a look into the spectrum of desire.

Of frustration.

Of experiences that have left an impact.

From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for us: asking for what we want and don't in the bedroom and beyond.

What people are saying about it: Prioritizing women's pleasure is a critical part of our liberation.

Not only is Moan an intimate, educational and funny collection about orgasm and desire but it pushes the cultural conversation forward.

-- Rashida Jones, actress, writer, producer Koenig's book is exactly what we need to break the absurd, toxic silence around female sexual pleasure.

-- Peggy Orenstein, bestselling author of Girls & Sex and Cinderella Ate My Daughter.

  • 100.38 Lei
  • Pret vechi: 111.53 Lei
    Discount -10%
Cu cate stelute ai vota acest produs?

Informatii produs

DetailsHe thought
From the hilarious to the tragic, from the intellectual to the erotic, these essays will leave you feeling inspired and excited to embark on your own journey of sexual exploration and empower women to do what most of the time is hardest for usAsking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
Asking for what we want and dont in the bedroom and beyond
What people are saying about itPrioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
Prioritizing womens pleasure is a critical part of our liberation
The simplest version of this story devoid of all identifying detailsHe thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought
He thought

Magazine self

Clientii au cumparat si

Categorii Emma Koenig

Branduri self

Moan: anonymous essays on female orgasm - Emma Koenig

Moan: anonymous essays on female orgasm - Emma Koenig

100.38 Lei