<p><b>At a time when women are more vocal than ever about our lives, there''s one last taboo.<br><br>We need to talk about porn<i>.</i></b><br><br>¿<b>Briskly confronting</b>...porn is an inescapable part of the environment we all share and should be talked about honestly¿ <b>this book is an important start.</b>¿<br><i><b>THE SUNDAY TIMES</b></i><br><br>''Celebrates women''s sexuality but also <b>unflinchingly reveals the truth</b> of how women are perceived - and used - in society by men.''<br><b>A <i>STYLIST</i> best non-fiction pick for 2024</b><br><br><b>When we think about porn today, we still mostly think about men. Men as the producers and the consumers. Women as the product. </b>Most women aren''t talking to each other about what they do and don''t do with porn - <i>not really.</i> And when we do talk about it, we are divided into unhelpful binaries: for or against? Liberation or coercion? Too sexual or not sexual enough? But in a world where porn sites get more traffic than Ne