Here are some comments from readers of Sleazy Stories. They are from Amazon.com and its international sites, gathered from internet forums, or were sent to me via email.
Aaron Sleazy simply presents his desires and how he act upon them. Whether the reader finds them morally detestable, erotically titillating, repulsive or worthy of emulation, is besides the point. This book is a sign of the times, and in a sense it reflects a type of primal and innate sexuality that no longer finds a comfortable place to sit in society, so it flouts it. The sincere reader can, at least, recognize the book's overwhelming honesty. Frankly, I found the book to be immensely entertaining and about as fascinating as a neon colored high speed euro-rail train wreck — it should be made into a movie, but given society's tendency to ape what it sees on the screen, no club bathroom will ever be safe for non coital purposes again...
—K. Southall (Amazon.com)Sleazy Stories is the modern male corollary to Nancy Friday’s My Secret Garden. For those unfamiliar with Friday’s 1973 provocative classic, it’s a tell-all anthology of sex fantasies from hundreds of anonymous women. Many women cite the book as sexually liberating, saying it gave them permission to accept (and enjoy) the sexuality society expects them to repress. Although Aaron Sleazy is writing decades later, and to men who have much less sexual inhabitations, he still tackles a subject equally taboo and socially unacceptable. Most men refuse to act on their sexuality, not because it’s repressed, but because doing so with strangers, in public, is condemned as obscene and vulgar.
—Rob Judge, (TSB Magazine)
If Aaron's intention was only to entertain and excite readers, then I'm afraid to say he managed more than that! I got down and dirty with 2 new girls in just 1 week right after reading this book, where usually I would manage only 1 per month doing about 15-30 approaches and wasting a lot of time with phone numbers.
—Rich (Amazon.co.uk)
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