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Lady Harpur returns to narrate this grand homage to all things licentious. Together with Lord Ferrars, she and her husband plays host to a group that have no physical or moral boundaries at all. Partaking in all deeds and devices front and back, ménage, lesbian tribadism, and gamahuching a plenty, it is not long before their newest recruit and eager young disciple Clara loses herself in the wildest and most unrestrained of sexual abandons. Pseudonymously written in 1885 and published the same year by the infamous Victorian publisher William Lazenby, responsible for The Oyster and The Boudoir erotic periodicals, and The Adventures of Lady Harpur (all also available from Locus Elm Press) this lascivious tour de force, replete with sumptuously graphic descriptions, really has something for everyone. A fine addition to any collection of the once suppressed.
Birchgrove Press presents, for the first time in one volume, new editions of two classic Victorian flagellant novels written and published by William Lazenby: The Convent School, or Early Experiences of a Young Flagellant and its companion volume, Miss Coote's Confession, or The Voluptuous Experiences of an Old Maid. In The Convent School, which was first published in 1879, a young countess recounts her merciless disciplinary experiences to a friend, Rosa Belinda Coote. In Miss Coote's Confession, which was first published in serial form in Lazenby's The Pearl: A Journal of Facetiæ and Voluptuous Reading (July 1879 to April 1880 issues), Rosa Coote relates the evolution of her passion for the whip.
Curiosities of Flagellation is a classic example of Victorian flagellant fiction. It was written and published by William Lazenby, a major figure in the underground world of Victorian erotica publishing. Five volumes were planned but only two were issued. The first volume was published in 1875 with the second appearing in 188o. Volume one was printed in Brussels; volume two in London. The text of this Birchgrove Press edition is based on an 1891 reprint.
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