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Scary Old Sex

ebook
4 of 4 copies available
4 of 4 copies available
A woman goes about certain rituals of sex with her second husband, sharing the bed with the ghosts of her sexual past. A beautiful young art student embarks on an affair with a much older, married, famous artist. A middle-aged woman struggles with the decline of her mother, once glamorous and still commanding; their fraught relationship causes unexpected feelings, both shaming and brutal. A man finds that his father has died while in the midst of extra-marital sex and wonders what he should do with the body. And a boy sits in his Calculus class, fantasizing about a schoolmate's breasts and worrying about his father lying in hospital, as outside his classroom window the Twin Towers begin to fall.
In this stunning, taboo-breaking debut, Arlene Heyman, a practicing psychiatrist, gives us what really goes on in people's minds, relationships, and beds. Raw, tender, funny, truthful and often shocking, Scary Old Sex is a fierce exploration of the chaos and beauty of life.
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    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 1, 2016
      This debut story collection by a New York-based psychiatrist/psychoanalyst with long-standing literary connections delves into the complicated relationships and intimate sex lives of mature couples. Old (and middle-aged) people have sex, too: appointment sex and spontaneous sex, passionate sex and perfunctory sex, sex with young lovers and aging spouses. That's the key takeaway from this unflinchingly candid collection. With a few notable exceptions, the women on whom the bulk of Heyman's stories center have lived and loved. Many have raised children, lost longtime partners, and survived to love again. But "scary old sex," to borrow Heyman's perhaps only partly ironic titular description, may involve squinting past sagging flesh, wrinkles, and puckers, accepting thinning hair (a byproduct of aging that apparently affects areas beyond one's head), readying boxes of tissues and K-Y Jelly, and, most challenging of all, learning to meld oneself to a new partner who differs in startling and lamentable ways from the youthful loves of yore. "He came in naked and she remembered again why she did not like to make love in the daytime," Marianne, the remarried widow who narrates the collection's first story, "The Loves of Her Life," remarks of her kindly second husband, Stu. "She joked sometimes that no one over forty should be allowed to make love in the daytime. There he was, every wrinkle exposed, as if he were in a Lucian Freud painting." Marianne and the other women Heyman evokes are equally imperfect--occasionally cruel, sometimes neglectful, often regretful. But these very flaws make these characters so real and dimensional, their stories so readable and resonant. Are Heyman's stories, which reflect three decades of work, based on the lives of her patients, her own life, a product of her imagination? The reader may well wonder. Yet one story, "In Love With Murray," which follows the affair of an older artist and a young art student and which was written "in memory of Bernard Malamud," may well have been inspired by the author's reputed affair with the renowned author, with whom she studied as a young coed at Bennington College. Heyman has been described as Malamud's muse. Judging from these stories, he may have been hers as well. The stories in this keenly observed collection lay bare truths--some comforting, others uncomfortable--about love and sex, aging and acceptance.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2016
      Short stories about people enjoying carnal pleasures might not scandalize many twentieth-century readers. But Heyman's honest, thought-provoking tales about elderly and physically imperfect people, their wrinkly bodies up against one another, are certain to shock many, especially the under-30 set. Just the notion that the protagonist in The Loves of Her life has some pretty steamy fantasies while engaging in coitus with her 70-plus spouse diverges unnervingly from mainstream depictions of sexual encounters. Heyman, a distinguished psychiatrist-psychoanalyst, goes even further into the realities of old age, portraying two senior participants who must consider such things as acid reflux and erectile dysfunction pills in order to perfectly time a romantic rendezvous. She also addresses the universal reluctance to even think about parents having sex in Night Call, in which a man is confronted with his father's infidelity when he dies in the arms of his mistress. Not all of Heyman's frank stories are totally sexual; some are sad, some amusing, but all are poignant and all widen our view of what it means to be human.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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