What would happen if the female vagina were as powerful as men fear it to be?
If you consult judeo-christian mythology, you’ll probably hear a handful of half-baked philosophies about women spoiling the innocence of man, women riding atop magnificent beasts hellbent on the world’s destruction, women whose birth canals must be regulated (typically by men) . . .
If you read this book, you’ll find a much more refreshing theory, one that falls in line with the symbolic depictions of the vagina as an agent of creation rather than destruction. And when the female doesn’t allow her agency to be stripped from her, the world becomes a better place. Unfortunately, the world becomes a better place at her expense.
And for the reason I mention above, I can’t tell if this book is about female empowerment, or if it is about the current state of affairs in our world, and the reality that no matter what women do, no matter what paradigm of empowerment they embrace, somehow society will try to suck them dry. The book is both uplifting and tragic, but that is part of what makes it good.
Simply put, this book is about pussy saving lives, and perhaps saving the world. And before you balk at the idea, just realize that it is already pretty much true.
And it can be a beautiful thing.
This book was not quite what I expected (I thought the protagonist was going to plant a seed of sexual energy in men that eventually caused them to explode), but I enjoyed it a lot. The flowery language of Christian’s early books is replaced by a style that is a bit more spare. High concept takes the forefront, and that concept is explored to considerable depths as we meet others (or one other) with powers similar to her own, only they are channeled through the opposite gender, and therefore carry a different energy.
This is a coming of age story, and the descriptions of birth and early motherhood are particularly poignant. Here, and in several other sections, Christian’s style from earlier works shines through. Her insights into the human condition rise to the surface. She never overwhelms us though. The balance is admirable.