What Asexuality Reveals About Desire, Society, and the Meaning of Sex
Ratings38
Average rating4
I have been wanting to read more books about the queer spectrum in general and asexuality in particular for a long while now but I usually don't know where to start. So when I saw this book on a couple of best of 2021 reads lists, I knew I had to pick it up.
My first thought while reading this book was that how I wish I could have had something like this when I was a teenager. Because there is something so profound in finding a book where every word calls to you personally and you feel utterly seen and relating to many things being talked about. I don't know want to talk more about myself because it'll probably become a personal essay and I'm not sure if I'm ready to bare my heart out here. However, I have to say that the author does a wonderful job highlighting what asexuality is, the variation and spectrum of experiences, discussions about identity, consent, relationships, and interspersed between it all are personal stories of many ace people who discovered their asexuality at different stages of their life.
I also highly appreciated the second half of the book which talks much more about compulsory sexuality in our society; how sex is ingrained as one of the most aspects of a relationship and how this pervades our culture, leaving hardly any room for other deep and meaningful relationships like friendships or queerplatonic ones; and how our society is built around marriage (and sex within it) as an institution worth preserving but anything outside of it as not equally important. As someone who really deeply values my friendships and have found so much joy in them, it was nice to see my frustration about these non sexual but very full of love relationships not given enough weight in real life being reflected on the page.
To roundup, If you are someone who wants to know more about the asexuality spectrum (but in a more western middle class context), you should really checkout this book. It's both full of personal stories and discussions about how asexuality interacts with various other aspects of society and I found it very informative. And if you are someone who are still trying to figure out if you fall somewhere on the ace spectrum, I hope a book like this will help bring some clarity to you and answer some questions you've never found answers to.