Review by New York Times Review
IS THE SEXUAL SELF an essential thing - immutable? Or can the complex matrix of desire change? These questions are fundamental to ideas of behavior and morality. I find myself with a foot in both worlds, willing to argue either point of view. The theme of "Sex After ..." - how women's sexual lives shift over time - is a significant one, rich with possibility. The result, however, is underwhelming: a series of short, episodic chapters based on interviews with 150 women, each chapter focused on a transitional event - sex after baby, sex after divorce, sex after menopause, and so on. Iris Krasnow, whose website calls her an "author, professor, speaker, mother, wife," has written several pop-culture books before this one, including "The Secret Lives of Wives" and "Surrendering to Yourself: You Are Your Own Soul Mate." Several of the interviews in "Sex After" were initiated by the readers of her previous books, or began as spontaneous conversations with strangers on cross-country flights or in nightclubs; this is not a book of rigorously researched psychology. "Sex After" also has very little sex in it; the author warns us of explicit details to come and then resorts to words like "heathens" and "yowzer." The subtitle is more accurate; this is in fact a book about love and marriage. The author tries to suggest otherwise when she tells us in the introduction, "This is not an old lady's book," and includes a long chapter on young people and the culture of hooking up. But "Sex After" is largely about older women, and the subjects appear to be almost entirely white. Krasnow rarely mentions race directly except in the few instances when the person in question is African-American; otherwise we are left to guess a subject's ethnicity from such clues as blond hair or blue eyes. Most of her subjects are also heterosexual. One chapter, inaccurately called "Sex After Coming Out," is devoted to women who entered same-sex relationships after a heterosexual marriage, but few identify as lesbians. The subjects in other chapters are uniformly in relationships with men, most of them long-term marriages. With this solid if workmanlike structure, the chapters are stamped from a template: a general introduction followed by several loosely edited transcripts of interviews, followed by the author's summary thoughts, at times including hazy medical advice like the need to be careful when considering a hysterectomy "because something really bad could happen." The interviews themselves tend to blur together: young love followed by disappointment, adaptation, loss and renewal. The author tells her readers emphatically that love and intimacy are what matter in sex: "Romantic infatuation is not biologically sustainable." "Sexual attraction gets the relationship started, but the ability to stoke that flame over time into a deeper intimacy is the real ticket to marital survival." But she is also a cheerleader for an active sex life and has a strong bias against romance without it, assuming sexless relationships are merely accommodations. Before the single interview with a woman who describes a happy marriage that is no longer sexual, the author writes that her subject has "a peaceful acceptance about her life without sex that reminds me of my friends who have turned into spiritual beings after Alcoholics Anonymous drained their booze" - a weird thing to say both about not missing sex and about A.A. Krasnow wants to have it both ways at once: lusty sexual agency and lasting monogamous love in the same package, and she can't always sort out the reality this requires. She believes that a good marriage needs sex and that sex is best in what amounts to marriage. She also believes women who have affairs "are claiming their own sexuality with the same unflinching machismo that has been stereotypically characteristic of males since Genesis." She never satisfactorily addresses the conundrum supposedly at the heart of the book - how claiming one's sexuality fits in with finding intimacy in the first place. TRANSITIONS ARE OFTEN abrupt and sometimes confusing, and the prose does not sing: "Her terse note tantalized me to learn more." One interview subject is "super-savvy," another is a "very feminine woman," and one is actually a "Hot Mama in leggings." At one point, in a typically confident overgeneralization, she writes, "Women seem to always have a hankering for men who are not afraid to get their hands dirty, who can fix things, and make things and are craggy. We are suckers for those sweaty alpha males who use tool belts and circular saws and claw hammers." Introducing the elderly women in a later chapter, she puts the reader on alert to what lies ahead: "You may remember your own granny as someone who was knitting in her rocker; on the pages to come you will be introduced to rocking grandmothers who attend Tantric sex workshops and are as lusty as teenagers.... They are the hippies turned yuppies turned graying fitness addicts who are watching Mick Jagger still writhing at 70 and who believe that anything is possible in the final lap." Early in the book, Krasnow states, "I am confident there is no such thing as normal." This declaration of a broad view of female sexuality is never realized. Throughout "Sex After," I was disappointed by the author's painfully middlebrow discussion of a small segment of women. I wish she had tried to represent the true variety of female sexuality. What a different book this would be if we could hear from women of various races and cultures, women who were actively bisexual, who had fetishes, who were consciously celibate, who were consciously single. There are plenty of women finding intimacy in lives quite different from those described here. The author has opportunities even on the limited canvas she chose. In the chapter on women who are in same-sex relationships after being married to men, she conflates missing the "pleasures of a penis" with "harboring 'fantasies' about having sex with males," missing the textured gestalt of gender that is part of many people's sexual fantasies and not necessarily part of their sex lives. Throughout, she misses the truly mysterious contours of the sexual self in which lines are continuously drawn, blurred, erased and drawn again. SALLIE TISDALE is the author of "Talk Dirty to Me: An Intimate Philosophy of Sex," which has just been released in a 20th-anniversary edition.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [February 9, 2014]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Krasnow (The Secret Lives of Wives) shares the experiences of women-and a few men-to demonstrate how sexual experiences change over the years. The author is a knowledgeable guide who shows great respect to the variety of life circumstances and aims to put readers at ease. Four sections work through the different stages in a person's sexual life. Starting with a discussion about casual sex and "friends with benefits," 20-somethings describe the feelings of empowerment that come with developing and following their own rules. Women talk about the joys and difficulties of life after childbirth, from feelings of deep connection to suffering feelings of post-partum depression and ugliness. Included is a section on sex after infidelity-from the perspectives of both those who have cheated and those who have been cheated on-as well as a discussion of sex after disease and injury. The final section covers sex for older individuals. Because Krasnow includes a vast number of people at different stages of their lives, there is something relatable for everyone and many opportunities to gain new knowledge as one moves through life. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In her latest personal growth volume, journalist Krasnow (Huffington Post) continues the story-sharing tradition she perfected in her popular The Secret Lives of Wives. Here, she invites women to give voice to the sexual challenges they have faced during and after such common life passages as pregnancy and childbirth, breast cancer diagnoses, infidelity and divorce, widowhood, and menopause. Individual narratives are interspersed with anecdotes and observations from the author and commentary from such experts as medical professionals and therapists. Like any collection of personal perspectives, some will resonate with individual readers and some will not. To her credit, Krasnow presents a chapter titled "Sex After Coming Out" with compassion and no moral judgment. Although the author certainly doesn't declare her book to be a comprehensive guide, women going through menopause, especially, would probably be better served by a strategy-oriented work such as Christiane Northrup's The Wisdom of Menopause, which includes information on sexual issues. VERDICT Although not every reader will find each circumstance relatable, the emotions expressed and some of the resolutions shared here are compelling. Recommended primarily for women seeking inspiration for sexual restoration. [See Prepub Alert, 8/12/13.]-Linda Petty, -Wimberley, TX (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Journalist Krasnow (The Secret Lives of Wives: Women Share What It Really Takes to Stay Married, 2011, etc.) shares the skinny on women's sex lives. The author chronicles her interviews with more than 150 subjects, mostly women, in an effort to explore the role of sex in their lives today. They range in age from 30-somethings adults to women nearing 90. These days, with marriage and raising a family often postponed until the 30s, the romance of dating is becoming obsolete. Single 20-somethings are increasingly embracing the casual hookup culture found on college campuses. The romantic intimacies of marriage yield to the stress of the early stages of parenting, frequently exacerbated by postpartum depression and exhaustion. Some of the author's interviewees report being gratified by the new sexual norms, which allow them to initiate sexual encounters even though these are not always satisfying. However, Dr. Justin Garcia, an assistant professor of Gender Studies at Indiana University, warns that hookups frequently involve alcohol and drugs and can leave women vulnerable to assault. Krasnow discusses how to deal with other strains on intimacy, including later-life problems such as divorce or death, the search for a new partner, or a man who is addicted to sex with the assistance of Viagra. "There is no gold standard sexual relationship to which women must aspire toward," writes the author. "[W]ho we love and how we love is ultimately the definition of our humanity." Still, the author devotes much of the book to the joys of uninhibited, exploratory sex with or without romantic frills. The erotic overtones in the interviews and the author's own commentary are intended to encourage anything-goes sexual exploration--accepting the inevitable failures and treasuring the carnal highs. A nuanced, revelatory account of the role of sexual freedom in modern intimacy.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.