Introduction

The premise that pornography is an isolated effort, and not necessarily literary, designed to spell out in magnified detail the transcendental aspects of unadulterated sex behavior, is not as suspect as the intelligent man might first perceive.

Sexual conditioning, as with any particular emotional conditioning, is fraught with dangers not always recognized, and if perchance they are recognized, these dangers tend to be minimized or guardedly disguised, the result being that the individual recipient of 'harm' (as it is explosively denotated in the press) becomes more viable, more sensitive to the cleverly designed pressures which 'isolated' pornography exerts on the average reader, or viewer of dirty pictures or 'blue' films.

That pornography could be an inspiring act certainly not unheard of! But to visualize pornography as less, to degrade or denigrate its multiple lessons, is quite prevalent!

Thus, today we have many opponents and many agitators, ail of whom deny that pornography is an isolated effort. These educated detractors scream that prurient interest is the case and thus, again, prohibit the questing mind from seeking the finite, which is, to a point, the total culmination of sexual experience.

Need exhaustion, physical or mental, always follow orgasm?

The answer is a firm 'no'. With the use of chemical aphrodisiacs, it has been determined successfully that the fabled sex stimulators of the past, love potions, causing sexual excitation and evidence of increased sexual activity, can be employed in a pure mental state, and that no artificiality is necessary.

Chemical compounds which excite the blood, and this blood, in turn, arouses the activity of the gonad, the penis, the vaginal orifice, can be purchased openly and their development has not necessarily been restricted to the sexual scientist!

Potions and lotions and charms and whatever, have long been available to increase man's sexual satiation, but what has often been overlooked is pornography, in any of its myriad forms.

Everyone is familiar with the addage that a half-dressed woman is more sexually stimulating than a naked whore, and there is a tremendous truth to this.

So it is with pornography, which tends to overexaggerate the realism of sex, devoting itself to fetisch, depravity, debauchery-which few of us ever find to be realistic, yet, it is realistic!

The chemical, P-chlorophenylalanine (abbreviated to read: PCPA) has been successfully used on a controlled group of pornography readers and viewers, and it has failed to elicit the sexual acuity which the 'pure' dirty stuff has done.

The novel which you are going to read is a case in point, although the scientific background which helped produce the book is not as evident as it might be.

The author has had long experience with chemotherapeutic technique and speaks well of it. The fantasies are quite real and sojurn perfectly with the theme of domination, bondage and enslavement of a weak man to a strong domineering female.

Paola Tagliamonte, M.D. Laboratory of Clinical Pharmacology