One day, he improvised, spanking her “to the rhythm of iambic pentameter.” Reader, she married him.Ī raunchy memoir revealing a visceral connection to the Bard. When she fell in love, she was unsatisfied by sex until she persuaded her lover to spank her. “Kink is more collaborative than it appears,” she writes. The author maintains that she could control how much, or how long, the spanking continued. In Spain, where she went after dropping out of high school, she met John, who fulfilled her needs repeatedly and energetically, with his bare hand, a belt, and a ruler, with which he paddled her “hard, thirty or forty times in rapid succession” and then, after a short break, 10 more. “I longed for Caliban because I longed to uncage myself, and the ravenous sexual terrors in me….I longed for Caliban’s ugly honesty and the unselfconsciousness of his impulses.” Keenan is captivated by the “erotic potential” of cross-dressing in Twelfth Night, which speaks to her “specific erotic quirks to an absurd degree.” Besides offering her take on 14 plays, including Hamlet, The Winter’s Tale, Romeo and Juliet (it’s about lust, not love, the author insists), King Lear, Othello, and, not surprisingly, The Taming of the Shrew, Keenan provides graphic recountings of her sexual liaisons. In The Tempest, for example, she identifies with the wild Caliban. It’s something I am.” She has no interest in ferreting out the cause of “this bizarre obsession,” finding introspection “exhausting….The psychological and social implications of my inner life were so disturbing to me that I could rarely force myself to confront them.” Instead, her sexuality informs her reading of Shakespeare. In her debut memoir, the author admits to being “obsessed with spankings.” Her fetish, she writes, “isn’t something I do. With a fetish for being spanked, Keenan sees sex in nearly every Shakespearean play.
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