The Manly Art of Seduction, How to Meet, Talk To, and Become Intimate with Anyone
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.75 (640 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1892149060 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 225 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-08-14 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Think of this as that book s prequel. --Kevin Taft, EDGE Magazine, Boston, March 1, 2010 . But the brilliance of the book is that you can actually read it from the perspective of the person being seduced. Terms sadly at odds with each other in our mature years, says Brass, a situation he rectifies with wide-ranging inclusiveness in his second self-help title, after _How to Survive Your Own Gay Life: An Adult Guide to Love, Sex and Relationships_. Belhue Press, 220 pages, $16.95 paper. With 46 short chapters, Brass how-to advice comes with work for you tips (practice touching your own body, perform a grooming assessment) and space for a worksheet the reader s homework assignment, as it were. The
How to make the most of what you look like, and get results that prove it. How to become the balanced, secure, sexually successful person you want to be. How to build confidence and security in yourself to keep from being devastated by rejection and your fears of it. One half hour can change your life!The first half hour of meeting a guy can make the whole difference. How to groom, dress, and act for seduction. If you feel you re always waiting for someone else to make the first move, if you're traumatized by fear of rejection and don't have a clue how to open a conversation or open up a relationship, The Manly Art of Seduction is a must-have. He tells you exactly how to use an understanding of male insecurities to your own advantage, allowing other men to feel secure in those very insecure first moments of meeting and negotiating closeness. How to deal, seductively, with disability, weight issues, penis size, erectile dysfunction, class, race and cultural differences, as well as with straight men, married men, monogamy, and threesomes. Why waste another night?Why spend another weekend alone? Why feel powerless with hand
He has been a finalist 6 times for Lambda Literary Awards, and has won five IPPY Awards for Independent Publishing excellence. He's had 70 poems set to music, and been included in The Columbia Anthology of Gay Literature. Perry Brass has published 19 books including How to Survive Your Own Gay Life, The Manly Art of Seduction, and Th
Good common-sense advice (mostly) This book is for the majority of men who do not know how to approach guys. Between the regular shy guy, the guy who cannot break away from the security of his friends, either physically or virtually present, and the many guys who stand around in a club (or sit in a coffee shop) with building resentment waiting for someone to approach them, this encompasses most gay guys.I found the book good in that it advocates a sense of agency, and gives some tools for making this easier. However, while I think most of his advice is good, some of it, if put. "Wish I'd Read it Sooner" according to Archer. After not being on the "market" for over 20 years, a date with the third guy I met seemed unusually promising. From what he said and did, all indications were that it went quite well, except that once it ended, so did our contact. I've Monday-morning-quarterbacked that experience over and over again, trying to figure out I might have done to turn him off. Then I downloaded this book.It didn't take long to realize that my inexperience and nervousness drove me toward being too forward, trying too hard to be likable, and saying so many things - a. Great Book for Anyone Who Loves Men - Even Straight Women Heidi Anderson I am not exactly sure what led me to read this book, except that I have always felt like I had more in common with gay men than I did with straight women. However, after a failed marriage and a few other failed relationships, I decided I wanted to change the way I related to men.This book was amazing. I had only been thinking in terms of what a woman goes through when dating, and never considered what it was like for men. It turns out I was scaring the hell out of men NOT because I was a bitchy harpy (my biggest fear) but because I did not und