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Nude Lindsay Lohan Is Marilyn Monroe

In 1962, photographer Bert Stern shot a series of photos of Marilyn Monroe that have collectively come to be known as “The Last Sitting.”

Taken during several boozy sessions at the Hotel Bel-Air, the photographs are arguably the most famous images ever captured of America’s most famous actress: Monroe, sleepy-eyed and naked, sips from a Champagne glass, enacts a fan dance of sorts with various diaphanous scarves, romps with erotic playfulness on a bed of white linens. Continue reading ›

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Jumper – Anywhere Is Possible

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A genetic anomaly allows a young man to teleport himself anywhere. He discovers this gift has existed for centuries and finds himself in a war that has been raging for thousands of years between “Jumpers” and those who have sworn to kill them.

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Why Mills and Boon Sells 200 Million Books A Year

Mills & Boon enjoys a huge readership, but has attracted furious critics during its 10 decades in business. Daisy Cummins explains why she is proud to write for the company, while Julie Bindel just wishes the books would go away

A fine romance

Mills & Boon books have long been an easy flogging horse. Many assume they are only read by the hopelessly unfashionable and out of touch, desperate for tales of helpless heroines swept off their feet by dashing, mildly brutish heroes.

In fact, though, the person reading an M&B is far more likely to be a successful, highly intelligent woman in her 20s or 30s. And neither these women nor the heroines they love are waiting for a man to come and rescue them. M&B has moved on and sexed up.

Next year sees the firm celebrate its centenary and high sales figures continue to speak for its success. Two hundred million books sold worldwide per annum; 13m shifted each year in the UK.
As the daughter of a single-parent feminist, I was hard-wired from an early age to balk at the merest whiff of sexism. Yet, after finding a M&B in my Irish Catholic grandmother’s room one summer, I was hooked.

I had discovered an exciting world of feisty heroines and hard-muscled heroes. Sexual tension simmered and exploded. And there was always a happy ending. The hero and heroine were equal partners and every conflict was happily resolved, not necessarily in a marriage but with a firm commitment for the future.

For me, the child of a revolutionary and somewhat bohemian background, it was a welcome – albeit, at first, slightly guilt-inducing – contrast to the anger at men I had witnessed growing up.

My mother knew I read them and said nothing, giving her tacit permission. She understood the need to balance things out. I now write for M&B myself, and am supremely proud to do so.

My last book, The Kouros Marriage Revenge, was about a devastatingly gorgeous Greek. I write under the name Abby Green purely for the thrill of having a pseudonym. – Read more at Guardian
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The Scene Of Breasts In Japan Streets

The Scene of Busts ~ Onnanoko no iru Bust Kei

Isao Hirachi’s fetish book “The Scene of Hips” was a best seller, focusing on ordinary women willing to flash their buttocks for the camera in public or private places, while remaining anonymous.

Well-regarded not just as fetish pornography but truly artistic for its use of composition, the photographs did not seem to try to exploit their subject as much as to show its inherent beauty. In a sequel to the book, Isao releases, naturally, “The Scene of Busts,” a tribute to the female breast which we have rarely seen before.

Once again we have ordinary women, faces sometimes obscured, masked, or turned away from the camera, showing their lovely mammaries in public or private, sometimes seemingly intentionally or as if “caught in the act”: without their shirt, and there are also photos of pairs of girls as well.

Most of the pictures are taken in the outdoors or in public places, giving the feeling of a secret thrill from exposing oneself. Also, by focusing on the breast only, we notice that it comes in such a variety of shapes and sizes, and all have an inherent beauty in them that makes us appreciate having viewed them.

Another beautiful photobook (coffee table book for the bold) that reminds us once again that the nude body isn’t a dirty thing for pornographic intent, but something that deserves celebration as this book has done. Perfectbound, 10 x 7.5″.

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Young Lady Chatterley’s Sexual Positions

Lady Chatterley is young, beautiful, and highly sexual and needs satisfaction. The book “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” is about one Lady Chatterley and the unhappy state of her married life she is married to a wealthy mine owner Sir Clifford Chatterley.

War wounds he had received made him paralyzed and impotent and she begins to explore her sexual feelings else where.

After a brief affair with a young playwright, she begins what appears to be a fulfilling and passionate relationship with Sir Clifford’s game keeper, Oliver Mellor’s.

However she soon becomes pregnant. In this state she seeks a divorce from Sir Clifford Chatterly.

He refuses to give her a divorce and this leaves Lady Chatterley and Oliver waiting only in the hope that Sir Clifford may die (he doesn’t), so they may be free to legitimatize their relations.

The book was fraught with moral and social questions.

Although the book by D.H. Lawrence was considered obscene, and banned in many places, in 1960 all prohibitions were lifted, it became a run-away best seller.

In the book, Lady Chatterley is described as highly sexual and sensual, lustful. The initial meetings with Oliver were hurried, full to stress and anxiety, and filled with passion.

Lady Chatterly – Sexual preferences

From a close study of the wording, and understanding that explicit sexual scenes were not allowed at all, we find Oliver and Constance have sex in the Conservatory (Greenhouse). Both were fully clothed, and had to open what needed to be opened.

It appears that Lady Chatterley loved to be taken from the rear, and in a standing doggy position. She would turn slightly at the waist and kiss her lover while he kept thrusting.

She also liked, it can be deduced, a face to face standing position, also fully clothed. This is not easy to negotiate, as the clothes were heavy and layered. Oliver was very strong, and while having her in an embrace, would slightly lift her, facilitating the re-arranging of clothing to permit penetration.

The fondling of breasts was accomplished with some difficulty, but that too was performed, and Lady Chatterley had for a time her lust satisfied.

There was one other position, performed while out in the forest. Lady Chatterley would find a suitable place to “sit”, and thereby have Oliver kiss and fondle her.

Then with the clever rearrangement of clothing, she would half stand, and Oliver would penetrate from the rear, in a modified standing doggy-style. She would brace herself for Oliver’s thrusting and return the motion in a reciprocal fashion.

Stimulation of erogenous zones

Judging by what we now know about the female erogenous zones, the positions mentioned are wonderful for stimulation of both the clitoris and the G-Spot.

Also, Oliver would have found the positions highly satisfactory, as they are masculine dominant positions that put him in full control.

D.H. Lawrence’s excellent book was ahead of its time (written in 1928 in a period when such sexual subjects were generally considered taboo), and he vividly presented his subject in what has become a classic of erotic fiction.

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Harry Potter and The Midnight Magic Dementors

A transatlantic storm whipped up Thursday when J.K. Rowling criticised US reviewers who leaked key details of her last Harry Potter book, including the death of six characters, despite a strict embargo.

Tight security surrounding “Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows“, which comes out just after midnight (2301 GMT) Friday worldwide, was punctured by The New York Times and others, the latest in a flurry of breaches.

Rowling stepped into the leaks row for the second time in as many days Thursday to say she was “staggered” by publication of reviews of the seventh Potter book.

On Wednesday, she had urged fans to “ignore the misinformation” circulating about the plot.

This came after lawyers for her publishers told websites to pull photographs they published earlier this week of what purported to be extracts from the long-awaited book.

In another embarrassment, the US publisher Scholastic said Thursday it will take legal action against distributor Levy Home Entertainment and retailer DeepDiscount.com after they sent copies to hundreds of readers in advance.

Rowling said in a statement: “I am staggered that some American newspapers have decided to publish purported spoilers in the form of reviews in complete disregard of the wishes of literally millions of readers, particularly children, who wanted to reach Harry’s final destination by themselves, in their own time.”

The New York Times review, written from a copy bought in the city Thursday, does not reveal which characters are killed off, despite fevered speculation among fans that Potter himself could be among them.

It describes the final pages of the book as “a big-screen, heart-racing, bone-chilling confrontation” and says it contains “an epilogue that clearly lays out people’s fates.”

“The losses mount with unnerving speed: at least a half-dozen characters we have come to know die in these pages,” the review adds.

The influential daily, which prides itself on high journalistic standards, defended its decision, saying it had not given away the ending.

“Our feeling is that once a book is offered up for sale at any public retail outlet, and we purchase a copy legally and openly, we are free to review it,” culture, books and theater editor Rick Lyman said in a statement.

The book officially goes on sale in the United States, Canada and Mexico at midnight Friday local time, a separate embargo to the rest of the world.

The furore threatens to overshadow the release, eagerly awaited by fans around the world, more than 100 of whom are already queuing outside a massive bookshop in London to get the first copies and attend a Harry Potter party.

Those outside Waterstone’s on Piccadilly included Laura Halinen, 23, from Finland who was dressed as a wizard and said she had come because this was “the biggest Harry Potter party in Europe and perhaps the world.”

“The first night outside was horrible — I thought it would be a fun way to get back to nature but it was not at all,” added Amber de Jager, 19, from the Netherlands, who has been queuing outside Waterstone’s since Wednesday.

“Fortunately, we reserved some hotel rooms nearby and I will take a shower and rest during the day.”

Rowling is hosting a signing and reading overnight Friday with hundreds of fans at London’s Natural History Museum, while hundreds of British bookshops are hosting after-hours parties to which fans are likely to flock.

The Potter books have sold 325 million copies internationally and have been translated into 64 languages.

Rowling, who wrote the first one as a single mother receiving state benefits, has made an estimated one billion dollars (725 million euros) from the works, which initially appeared 10 years ago.

She has not completely ruled out writing a new Potter book, although she says it is highly unlikely, and is now set to work on new writing projects.

At least two million people worldwide have pre-ordered copies from online retailer Amazon.

Daniel Radcliffe, the 17-year-old star of the blockbuster film franchise, has said he believes Harry could be killed.

British bookmaker Ladbrokes has stopped taking all bets related to the book, while rivals William Hill are no longer taking money on Potter’s killer after a flurry of bets.

 


 


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