
With the Hand
Mels Van Driel
Most women do it at home; men, it seems, do it everywhere. Some consider it a health treatment, others as love for themselves. Yet despite everyone doing it, no one actually talks about it: masturbation is still taboo, and even today the subject is not discussed at dinner parties or soirées. To help the world overcome its diffidence towards solo sex Mels van Driel has written With the Hand. Consulting theologians, historians, classicists, doctors, sexologists, connoisseurs, artists, philosophers, writers, poets, musicians, feminists and chauvinists, Van Driel answers questions about what masturbation actually is, and describes the latest discoveries and developments in the field.
Covering a great number of topics, from the physical, to the mythical, to the mythological, to the artistic, this book explores masturbation in all its astonishing variety. From statistics of age, location and frequency, to the effects of circumcision, to multiple orgasms, he also explores masturbation in art, literature, poetry, song, religion and philosophy.
Frequently astounding, often humorous and always informative, With the Hand refutes the many myths and confusion surrounding this universal, yet unmentionable pursuit. Making an unusual gift, this is perhaps the ultimate bedtime book.
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About Mels Van Driel
Reviews for With the Hand
Style, Sunday Times
an enjoyable, human and humane study of attitudes to masturbation in science, sexology, education, religion, philosophy, art, song and literature, from ancient Egypt to the present . . . The history of masturbation is necessarily a history of attitudes to the body, to fantasy, love and intimacy. The book abounds with interesting material . . . The author has an eye for a good anecdote.
Independent Review
His book is exactly what youd expect a Dutch urologist's to be: clear-sighted, wry and relentlessly liberal . . . provides splendid material for party conversation.
Culture, Sunday Times
an enthusiastic, amusing and eye-opening exploration of a topic which remains disappointingly taboo.
New Scientist
When his stethoscope is about his neck, the M.D. employs all the unvarnished plainspokenness of any health-care professional. But when he entertains historical, literary, and other arts-and-humanities perspectives, he is as curious and open to surprise as any cultural critic.
Chronicle of Higher Education
a well thought out, broadly focused addition to the public discussion of this very private activity . . . Mr. van Driel writes well and approaches the difficult topic of masturbation with openness and academic rigor. The book looks at a raft of different opinions and perspectives on masturbation and contains elements that may be confrontational for people on either side of the debate.
New York Journal of Books