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Sex Collectors
 
 

Sex Collectors [Kindle Edition]

Geoff Nicholson
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Though Alfred Kinsey has been in the spotlight recently, collectors of sex-related objects generally receive little attention, perhaps because they tend to be secretive, and virtually anything can be erotic to someone. Nicholson, author of 13 novels including the Whitbread-shortlisted Bleeding London, defines "sex collector" so broadly that he includes those who collect printed material, art, films, sex toys and even fingernail extensions and Lotus shoes, worn by Chinese women with bound feet. Many readers will be happy to accompany Nicholson on his visits to various collectors, famous and not. In Florida, he finds a grandmother with a $5 million erotica collection, whereas in Paris, he tries to convince Catherine Millet, author of The Sexual Life of Catherine M., that she is indeed a collector of erotic adventures. But serious erotologists may find this book dilettantish: sparsely illustrated with black and white photos and lacking an index and a list of collectors, dealers, museums and other resources. Nicholson is aware of these shortcomings: "I know it's partial, prejudiced, incomplete.... Exactly like any other collection. It's easy to imagine bigger, better, more inclusive, more gaudy collections. The only problem: they wouldn't be mine." 15 b&w photos. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The New Yorker

Long attuned to the libidinal energy of the collecting impulse, Nicholson sets out to investigate the people who collect erotic art, artifacts, and paraphernalia. The result is a cheerful, scattershot series of visits with various perverse obsessives—a septuagenarian former stripper who has amassed a history of burlesque in souvenirs; a trailer-park denizen who is one of the world's foremost erotic bibliographers; collectors of pornographic paintings, bookplates, vintage magazines. The book is fun but lacks both the cohesion and rigor of history or social science, and the depth and insight of true portraiture. Nicholson seems not to share the fastidiousness and completist tendencies of his collector subjects.
Copyright © 2006 Click here to subscribe to The New Yorker

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 457 KB
  • Print Length: 288 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0743265874
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (June 2, 2006)
  • Sold by: Simon and Schuster Digital Sales Inc
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000GCFXXQ
  • Text-to-Speech: Not enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #613,053 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Collecting the Collectors, June 28, 2006
It is not surprising to come across a person who collects things: stamps, coins, books. No one considers such collecting remotely abnormal, even though a person might get so focused on collecting as to be unable to talk with interest about anything else. Then there are the people who collect erotic items, and that makes alarm bells go off. Of course, the erotica collectors are not as likely to bore us with their collections as, say, Barbie collectors are. For one thing, erotica is interesting to almost everyone who will admit it. For another thing, such collections are usually covert, and for yet another, even though the collectors might be obsessive, they don't get tedious with their stories about their treasures, since they are usually not a topic of conversation. Geoff Nicholson has seen lots of such collections, and gotten the collectors to talk, and reports back in _Sex Collectors: The Secret World of Consumers, Connoisseurs, Curators, Creators, Dealers, Bibliographers, and Accumulators of "Erotica"_ (Simon and Schuster). It's a funny, genial guide to odd (but not sociopathic) people and strange pursuits; Nicholson has seen plenty of eye-popping material, and while he candidly admits that there are some things he has seen that he wishes he could excise from his memory, he does not include such stuff in his descriptions. The book reflects his experience in researching it: "I've seen a great many things that were sexy and fun and beautiful and fascinating, and I wouldn't have missed them for the world." His enthusiastic book is much more about collecting than it is about erotica or sex. In fact, he dismisses the argument about differentiating between what is pornography and what is art by saying that it doesn't make a difference for the purpose of the book; what matters is that someone is collecting it.

Who is doing the collecting? Generally, people with a lot of money, for originals are not cheap and the collections are often extensive. Take Naomi Wilzig, of whom the _National Examiner_ headlined, "GRANNY Proves You're Never Too Old for PORNO!" She enjoys showing the enormous collection in her home, but is having a museum built so that we can all see it someday. Another great collector was Alfred Kinsey, although he is better known, of course, for his interviews and his reports on the sexuality of Americans. "Kinsey believed in data," Nicholson writes, and was trained as a biologist; he collected hundreds of thousands of gall wasps, his specialty, and when he moved into investigating sex, he collected anything having to do with it. Nowadays, "People donate to the Kinsey having reached the stage of their lives when they want to get rid of their collections." Also, police departments donate sex-related materials taken from offenders.
If there are collectors, there must be dealers, although "each considers the other a necessary evil". Some of them enjoy wonderful items going through their hands and being passed on (at profit) with no impulse to own any of them; others buy and sell to make a living, but also to improve their own collections.

There are tales of many other collectors and collections here. Cynthia Plaster Caster has spent decades making plaster casts of famous people's penises, and has branched out into breasts. There's the small collection of lotus shoes, the kind that were worn by Chinese women whose feet had been bound. There's a collection of 80,000 girlie magazines. There is a large group of people who collect erotic book plates, and commission them. Nicholson eventually helps us realize that we are all sex collectors; we may not look for something to put on our shelves, but we do, if health and opportunity allow, amass sexual experiences. He also comes to the conclusion that he is a bit of collector himself, not necessarily of the type of item the more generous of the collectors profiled here sent him away with, but a collector of sex collectors, an activity that has involved such familiar endeavors as finding interesting examples, doing negotiations, lucking out on good finds, and other things that collectors here do. His is a unique collection, and it is generously shared in a breezy, amusing book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Poor Tour Guide, May 18, 2011
I can describe this book in this fashion: Sometimes when I visit a historical site or museum or go on a tour there will often be a tour guide. Sometimes you get a tour guide who really seems to not only know what the subject is but also is really into it-excited about the place and its history. Because of their enthusiasm, you get a better experience of the place. Other times, you will go on a tour where the guide is simply just spouting facts and figures, pointing out places where this and that happened, etc. without much care. Those guides just don't have any energy or enthusiasm. They just don't seem to really care. It's a job to them. In my opinion, this book is written and presented in that way. There is very little enthusiasm about the subject matter. While the subject matter is interesting, it is presented in such a poor fashion by someone who doesn't really "get it" or even seems to care about it, it just sort of kills the experience.

The author fully admits to not being a collector himself to which he gives one reason for his writing the book as: "I don't know why". This pretty much sums up the experience I had when I decided to continue to read this book.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Picture Would Have Been Worth...., March 3, 2009
Geoff Nicholson's book is capably written but given its promising title and subject matter, it suffers from a lack of pictures.
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