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First tagged by R. Crasta
Customer tags: humor(2), book publishing, massage, indonesia, indians, bill gates, public health, hiv, phallic history, political humor, literary, literotica
Review & Description
"Good Morning, I Love You; What is your Name?" "Effing for Humanity" and "A Short History of My Pecker" are just three of the surprising and funny essays in this collection of humor from the author of "I Will Not Go the F**k to Sleep" and "The Revised Kama Sutra".
This is a nonconformist book of humor and sexuality from the author who was described as "very funny" by Richard Crasta.
The book also takes a surprising view of HIV, the AIDS debate, and the landscape of love. It then probes chemical dependency, massage, and a literary agency.
On the surface, an unusual book, but very Richard Crasta: sharp, funny, surprising, shocking, subversive. (50,000 words)
This e-book edition, which has an expanded and never-published version of the “Bill Gates” essay, is Crasta’s declaration of independence, defying Ayatollahs and Rule Makers alike.
"Hilarious yet satirical account of the author's approach to sex."--Savvy Magazine
“Distinct and thought-provoking. . . subversively redefines history. With witty, sexy, and passionate style, Richard Crasta deals with India’s tortured and confused Puritanism.”—www.living.oneindia.in
“If any Indian writer has pushed the boundaries of satirical writing, with dollops of sexual humour (and satirical writing on a lot of other serious stuff) in his own distinctive style, it’s Richard.”—www.kitaabonline.wordpress.com
"Good Morning, I Love You; What is your Name?" "Effing for Humanity" and "A Short History of My Pecker" are just three of the surprising and funny essays in this collection of humor from the author of "I Will Not Go the F**k to Sleep" and "The Revised Kama Sutra".
This is a nonconformist book of humor and sexuality from the author who was described as "very funny" by Richard Crasta.
The book also takes a surprising view of HIV, the AIDS debate, and the landscape of love. It then probes chemical dependency, massage, and a literary agency.
On the surface, an unusual book, but very Richard Crasta: sharp, funny, surprising, shocking, subversive. (50,000 words)
This e-book edition, which has an expanded and never-published version of the “Bill Gates” essay, is Crasta’s declaration of independence, defying Ayatollahs and Rule Makers alike.
"Hilarious yet satirical account of the author's approach to sex."--Savvy Magazine
“Distinct and thought-provoking. . . subversively redefines history. With witty, sexy, and passionate style, Richard Crasta deals with India’s tortured and confused Puritanism.”—www.living.oneindia.in
“If any Indian writer has pushed the boundaries of satirical writing, with dollops of sexual humour (and satirical writing on a lot of other serious stuff) in his own distinctive style, it’s Richard.”—www.kitaabonline.wordpress.com
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