Kama Sutra Kindle Super Sex

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Kama Sutra Kindle Super Sex The Kama Sutra was written in 400 CE, but it’s still extremely popular today because the advice it gives about love and sex really works.   With this explicitly illustrated ebook you can easily master fabulous sex techniques that have stood the test of time. From foreplay to afterplay, and all the really hot bits in between, Kama Sutra Super Sex has it all. With clear, concise descriptions and vivid photos (more than 100 of them) you’ll learn amazing pleasure practices like:   Mouth-watering, passion provoking kisses, such as the Throbbing Kiss, the Kiss of the Upper Lip, and Fighting of the Tongues The healing, sensitizing, awakening art of genital massage – for her (Yoni Massage) and for him (Lingam Massage) Exotic Kama Sutra scratches  like Ripping Silk and Tiger’s Claw — they stimulate much more than just your back   Bites, such as the Coral and Jewel and the Biting of the Boar, that will make your lover swoon in passionate ecstasy   Simple slaps, like Apah Buy Kama Sutra Kindle Super Sex

The Kindle KamaSutra

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The Kindle KamaSutra The Kama Sutra (Sanskrit: कामसूत्र), (alternative spellings: Kamasutraṃ or simply Kamasutra), is an ancient Indian Hindu text widely considered to be the standard work on human sexual behavior in Sanskrit literature written by Mallanāga Vātsyāyana. A portion of the work consists of practical advice on sexual intercourse. It is largely in prose, with many inserted anustubh poetry verses. Kāma means sensual or sexual pleasure, and “sūtra” literally means a thread or line that holds things together, and more metaphorically refers to an aphorism (or line, rule, formula), or a collection of such aphorisms in the form of a manual. The modern English word “suture” is derived from the same root.The Kama Sutra is the oldest and most notable of a group of texts known generically as Kama Shastra (Sanskrit: Kāma Śāstra). Traditionally, the first transmission of Kama Shastra or “Discipline of Kama” is attributed to Nandi the sacred bull, Shiva’s doorkeeper Buy The Kindle KamaSutra

KAMASUTRA (The Original Uncut Edition) (Kindle Edition)

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KAMASUTRA (The Original Uncut  Edition)

KAMASUTRA (The Original Uncut Edition)

The Kama Sutra of Vatsyayana is undoubtedly the world’s best-known classic work of erotic literature. Written by the sage Vatsyayana early in the Gupta period of India (320-540 C.E.), referred to as the “Classical Age of India”, it is a scholarly treatise about sexual enjoyment and pleasure. The Kama Sutra reveals many fascinating, surprising and sometimes even humorous insights into the sexual mores and customs of ancient India. Yet, despite its historical and anthropological significance, the teachings of the Kama Sutra remain timeless and universal, and are as useful today for understanding and expressing human sexuality as they were in ancient India. This edition of the Kama Sutra is based on the annotated translation published in 1883 by Sir Richard F. Burton, the famous British explorer, linguist, ethnologist and sexologist. Unlike other Victorian-era translators, who tended to whitewash their translations to conform with accepted “decency”, Burton boldly and literally translated his many published works as they were originally written, including his edition of the Kama Sutra. Although our digital edition has significantly improved upon Burton’s edition (such as fixing numerous textual errors and reorganizing several chapters for logical consistency), it is otherwise a complete, faithful, unexpurgated and high-quality reproduction, completely preserving the overall flavor of the Burton translation.

The Book of Love: The Story of the Kamasutra (Kindle Edition)

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The Book of Love: The Story of the Kamasutra

The Book of Love: The Story of the Kamasutra (Kindle Edition)

Years ago, a bunch of us were sitting around drinking when I heard a friend murmur two sentences I have never forgotten. “You know, guys, sex is the greatest thing in the world.” He paused and we were all about to nod in agreement. He was, after all, a noted and knowledgeable ladies’ man. Unexpectedly, though, he then added, with infinite wistfulness: “But it’s just not that great.”

There, in that gulf between the reality and the dream, lies the domain of pornography, the sex industry and the masturbatory fantasy — of Viagra and the midlife crisis. Our Western myths of love are seldom about fulfillment; they are all about yearning. In Plato’s Symposium we are told that the gods divided the original ball-like human beings in two, and that we consequently spend our lives searching for the other half who will complete us. So-called romantic love, which first blossomed in 12th-century France, revels in passion delayed, forbidden or otherwise thwarted. Its real theme is desire.

But for the Western imagination, the East has long represented an escape from this pervasive sexual unhappiness. Baudelaire spoke of tropic realms of “luxe, calme et volupté”; Hawaii and Tahiti once beckoned as Edens of innocent voluptuousness. From the 18th century on, the Orient, in general, seemed a perfumed garden, offering the tender attentions of geishas, bare-breasted island girls and pretty boys. Here, amid erotic graciousness, the darkness of sin was unknown. And yet, even this scented, sensual wonderland turned out to have its guide, its bible: The Kamasutra, sometimes subtitled “The Hindu Art of Love.”