From the outset, "The Way it Works with Women" promised a 143 page meditation on desire, but soon became repetitive with its uninteresting depiction of female sexuality. All of the women are either divine whores or curious youths who have an obsession for male genitalia and orgasm. The dust jacket states that the book is "grounded firmly in the literary tradition best exemplified in recent years by Pierre Jean Jouve and Georges Bataille." There is a clear connection to Bataille in terms of literary transgression and extreme states of emotion, yet the book is limited to its own perversion-it doesn't escape its own world, which could be enjoyable because it makes one feel enveloped in the space of the page. In the space of "The Way it Works with Women" I grew tired.
With that being said, there are some beautiful passages where Calaferte captures a stillness. Written in a fragmentary style with no linearity, the book resembles an outburst where the reader is bombarded with images from an erotic underworld that shares space with the divine and the mysterious. This metaphysical understanding of the erotic is what Calaferte is attempting to steal and put into words. With "The Way it Works with Women," he wants the reader to gaze upon the all encompassing elements of eroticism (from his understanding), whether it is the nymphomaniac, the curious young girl, or the extremes of ecstasy and degradation.
There is something that needs to be said about "The Way it Works with Women." It is only one book from an oeuvre that has not been translated into English. Calaferte produced a significant body of literary texts ranging from poems, plays, essays, and novels. The only other book translated into English is L’Aventure intérieure (The Inner Adventure), which is comprised of interviews with Calaferte that expose an English speaking audience to his philosophical views on literature and metaphysics. It appears then "The Way it Works with Women" is a fragment in and of itself in a oeuvre that seeks the beyond through intense moments of experience. Calaferte is interested in a metaphysics, eroticism, and experience (in the Bataillean sense).
Despite the androcentric depiction of female sexuality and the repetitiveness of its themes, "The Way it Works with Women" is part of a much larger body of literary output that has a coherence. This particular work had some beautiful passages, but remained static in its shattered form.