Secondhand Vintage Adult Paperbacks Bargain Book Box SP2792

$120.00 AUD

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Secondhand Vintage Adult Paperbacks Bargain Book Box SP2792

A time capsule of mid-century curiosity dressed up as sexual frankness, this box gathers seventeen vintage adult paperbacks from the heyday of pulp sexology — an era when every taboo had a breathlessly titled paperback to go with it. The covers alone are worth the price: bold, sensational, and radiating the confident authority that only 1960s publishing could manufacture with a perfectly straight face. From Taipei to Istanbul, the American suburbs to the Continental underground, these books tell you as much about the decade that produced them as about anything they ostensibly discuss.

  1. Sex & The Lesbian — John Tanner — A representative title from the NB Books pulp sexology stable, presented as a frank investigation into lesbian life and relationships in mid-century America with all the earnest scandalousness the series excelled at.
  2. Sexual Behavior and Customs of the French — A sensationalist report purporting to reveal the shocking sexual mores of the French, in the pseudo-scientific tradition that sold millions of paperbacks to curious American readers throughout the 1960s.
  3. Deviation — O. Gunther Wolf — A guide to understanding sexual deviation that blends the authoritative manner of a clinical text with the tantalising promise of a tell-all expose, hitting the perfect pulp sexology balance of alarm and fascination.
  4. A Very Private Love — Monica Maitland — A novel of illicit passion and private desire in the tradition of 1960s pulp romance, with all the melodrama and forbidden frisson the genre demanded and reliably delivered.
  5. Sex: Methods and Manners — Louis Berg M.D. and Robert Street — A co-authored sex manual presenting itself as a practical guide to technique and bedroom etiquette, with the earnest frankness that made this genre a publishing phenomenon on both sides of the Atlantic.
  6. Sex & Drugs — Clayton Matthews — Matthews examines the intersection of two great 1960s taboos with the breathless urgency of a reporter who has stumbled onto something the public absolutely needs to know.
  7. The Grapevine — Leah Hyland — A novel of secrets, whispers, and the sexual underground of suburban life, built on the voyeuristic energy that made this corner of the 1960s book market irresistible to curious readers.
  8. Sex & Divorce — George Clayton — Clayton turns his lens on desire and intimacy in the aftermath of marriage, exploring what happens when the legal and emotional ties are cut and life begins again with new and complicated freedoms.
  9. Sexual Climax and the American Female — Russell Trainer — Trainer positions himself as a frank champion of women's sexual pleasure at a time when the subject was barely discussed openly, with the earnest authority that characterises his best work.
  10. The Male Homosexual Today — A survey of gay male life and sexuality written in the cautiously sympathetic investigative style of its era, as interesting now for what it cannot quite say as for what it does.
  11. The Big Switch — Kay Martin — A pulp novel exploring blurred sexual identity and transgressive desire, with the knowing sensationalism that made Kay Martin's work popular with readers looking for something a little more daring.
  12. Sex & The Youth Revolution — George Clayton — Clayton's contribution to the 1960s debate about changing sexual values among young people, framing the generational shift through his characteristic mix of pseudo-reportage and moral urgency.
  13. Taipei After Dark — Andrew Harris — A tour of Taipei's nocturnal underworld promising to reveal what the tourist guides dare not show, in the tradition of scandalous Asian city exposés that found a ready audience among 1960s readers.
  14. The Velvet Underground Revisited — Michael Leigh — Leigh's follow-up to his landmark 1963 study of sexual subcultures — the book that gave the famous band their name — updating his investigation into underground sex scenes, fetish communities, and the shadows of American city life.
  15. Istanbul After Dark — A risqué city exposé promising the intimate secrets of a place where East meets West in ways no guidebook will acknowledge, with all the colourful excess the "After Dark" series was known for.
  16. Pagan Lover — William Vaneer — A novel of uninhibited passion set against an exotic backdrop, with the heightened romantic intensity that characterises this vivid corner of the 1960s paperback market.
  17. Boy Madness — An account of youthful sexual experimentation in the confessional style that gave this genre its peculiar mix of moral alarm and vicarious appeal, the subtitle leaving very little to the imagination.
Format: Secondhand Box

Genre: Fiction
Description

Secondhand Vintage Adult Paperbacks Bargain Book Box SP2792

A time capsule of mid-century curiosity dressed up as sexual frankness, this box gathers seventeen vintage adult paperbacks from the heyday of pulp sexology — an era when every taboo had a breathlessly titled paperback to go with it. The covers alone are worth the price: bold, sensational, and radiating the confident authority that only 1960s publishing could manufacture with a perfectly straight face. From Taipei to Istanbul, the American suburbs to the Continental underground, these books tell you as much about the decade that produced them as about anything they ostensibly discuss.

  1. Sex & The Lesbian — John Tanner — A representative title from the NB Books pulp sexology stable, presented as a frank investigation into lesbian life and relationships in mid-century America with all the earnest scandalousness the series excelled at.
  2. Sexual Behavior and Customs of the French — A sensationalist report purporting to reveal the shocking sexual mores of the French, in the pseudo-scientific tradition that sold millions of paperbacks to curious American readers throughout the 1960s.
  3. Deviation — O. Gunther Wolf — A guide to understanding sexual deviation that blends the authoritative manner of a clinical text with the tantalising promise of a tell-all expose, hitting the perfect pulp sexology balance of alarm and fascination.
  4. A Very Private Love — Monica Maitland — A novel of illicit passion and private desire in the tradition of 1960s pulp romance, with all the melodrama and forbidden frisson the genre demanded and reliably delivered.
  5. Sex: Methods and Manners — Louis Berg M.D. and Robert Street — A co-authored sex manual presenting itself as a practical guide to technique and bedroom etiquette, with the earnest frankness that made this genre a publishing phenomenon on both sides of the Atlantic.
  6. Sex & Drugs — Clayton Matthews — Matthews examines the intersection of two great 1960s taboos with the breathless urgency of a reporter who has stumbled onto something the public absolutely needs to know.
  7. The Grapevine — Leah Hyland — A novel of secrets, whispers, and the sexual underground of suburban life, built on the voyeuristic energy that made this corner of the 1960s book market irresistible to curious readers.
  8. Sex & Divorce — George Clayton — Clayton turns his lens on desire and intimacy in the aftermath of marriage, exploring what happens when the legal and emotional ties are cut and life begins again with new and complicated freedoms.
  9. Sexual Climax and the American Female — Russell Trainer — Trainer positions himself as a frank champion of women's sexual pleasure at a time when the subject was barely discussed openly, with the earnest authority that characterises his best work.
  10. The Male Homosexual Today — A survey of gay male life and sexuality written in the cautiously sympathetic investigative style of its era, as interesting now for what it cannot quite say as for what it does.
  11. The Big Switch — Kay Martin — A pulp novel exploring blurred sexual identity and transgressive desire, with the knowing sensationalism that made Kay Martin's work popular with readers looking for something a little more daring.
  12. Sex & The Youth Revolution — George Clayton — Clayton's contribution to the 1960s debate about changing sexual values among young people, framing the generational shift through his characteristic mix of pseudo-reportage and moral urgency.
  13. Taipei After Dark — Andrew Harris — A tour of Taipei's nocturnal underworld promising to reveal what the tourist guides dare not show, in the tradition of scandalous Asian city exposés that found a ready audience among 1960s readers.
  14. The Velvet Underground Revisited — Michael Leigh — Leigh's follow-up to his landmark 1963 study of sexual subcultures — the book that gave the famous band their name — updating his investigation into underground sex scenes, fetish communities, and the shadows of American city life.
  15. Istanbul After Dark — A risqué city exposé promising the intimate secrets of a place where East meets West in ways no guidebook will acknowledge, with all the colourful excess the "After Dark" series was known for.
  16. Pagan Lover — William Vaneer — A novel of uninhibited passion set against an exotic backdrop, with the heightened romantic intensity that characterises this vivid corner of the 1960s paperback market.
  17. Boy Madness — An account of youthful sexual experimentation in the confessional style that gave this genre its peculiar mix of moral alarm and vicarious appeal, the subtitle leaving very little to the imagination.