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Book Review - Female Ejaculation and the G-Spot

Female Ejaculation and the G-Spot - Informative, accessible, interesting, personal . . . “Female Ejaculation and the G-Spot” is one of the most trusted books when it comes to learning how to make your girl squirt.

If you’ve read through our past posts, then you know that Alain and I are huge fans of female ejaculation and G-spot play. It’s quite an interesting and exhilarating thing to experience a G-spot orgasm.

The problem, of course, is that the G-spot is made out to be some mythical, impossible place buried deep within a woman’s vagina. Men have gone searching, and have never returned.

Not so! The truth is, anyone woman can find and stimulate her G-spot. And though there are no hard statistics, it is theorized that most all women are capable of female ejaculation.

Female Ejaculation and the G-spot” is my number-one recommendation for G-spot information. The foreword is written by Annie Sprinkle herself. (In case you don’t know who that is, Annie Sprinkle is a former porn star turned sex guru– search for some of her kick-ass movies from the 70s).

Deborah Sundhal, author of the book, covers just about every question you might have about female ejaculation and the G-spot. She starts with the basics, like explaining exactly what and where the G-spot is (including very helpful diagrams). She also clears up some myths about the G-spot and female ejaculation or “squirting,” as it’s often called in porn. For instance, many people are under the impression that female ejaculate is just pee. Not true at all! As Sundhal explains, female ejaculate, like male ejaculate, is prostaic fluid (that is, both fluids come from the prostate, but of course female ejaculate doesn’t contain semen).

From here, you’ll get more specific, in-depth information about squirting and G-spot play. She makes a very important distinction by pointing out that women can ejaculate without having a G-spot orgasm. Chapter 4 covers “How to ejaculate without an orgasm,” while chapter 5 tells how you to have your squirting and your orgasm, too.

I especially love that she spends several chapters on how to involve your partner in your G-spot stimulation and ejaculation. She’s extremely down-to-earth and makes the reader feel very at ease with the whole experience. You’ll learn all of the essential information you need to get intimate with your body. She teaches you techniques to working through emotional roadblocks that many women have when it comes to orgasm, and especially ejaculation. Want to involve sex toys in your romp? Sundhal points you in the right direction.

In the end, you’re going to be extremely informed and ready to get started. I especially recommend this book because of the accepting, understanding, and accessible tone she takes in her writing. Keep in mind, female ejaculation is a relatively unusual and often misunderstood thing. Many women are too embarrassed or scared to do it. Others have done it and, not knowing what happened, thought they peed. And some people don’t even think it’s real. (It is, by the way. Yours truly is a squirter.)

By the way, I highly recommend picking up Seymour Butts’ Guide to Female Ejaculation DVD, which we reviewed earlier. This book, along with Seymour Butt’s DVD, makes for the only materials you’ll need in experiencing female ejaculation and G-spot play.

Buy “Female Ejaculation and the G-spot” at Libida

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