transmitted diseases, contraception, sexual abuse, or reproduction. (Though many books do cover these issues in part.) And this for reasons they freely admit. One, they didn’t want to “. . .bite off more than [they] could chew,” and two, “Although we understand the problems, turmoil and pain that are associated with sex for so many today, we still see the pleasure, joy and happiness that our sexuality holds. Therefore, we have dedicated The Sexuality Library to the positive side of sex.”
They have succeeded marvelously in this first effort. The catalog is a joy to peruse, and educates merely by exposing one to different aspects of sexuality.