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Body Check: Erotic Lesbian Sports Stories

Body Check: Erotic Lesbian Sports Stories

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Shockingly Readable
Review: It's hard enough to come by erotica that's well-written enough to be (...); try finding lesbian erotica that fits both of those categories! Overall, this book is excellent. I didn't like every story in it, but it has fairly broad appeal across the board. That said, there really isn't much "niche" (...)in here-- genderplay, s/m, anything remotely fetish-y. Which, in fact, is why I'm a fan. It isn't that none of that is appealing, just that most of these collections I've found that address any of those, attempt to address all of them, and do it miserably. Forget the "sports" part; that's a general theme throughout, but these should appeal to just about anyone, athletic or not.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Get this book and Get Sweaty!
Review: You don't have to be a jock to enjoy this book. Nicole Foster, who has edited several collections for Alyson, has filled a team roster of 20 erotic lesbian sports stories with a range of sporting women and lots of intense, sweaty moments. There are Olympic hopefuls in the bittersweet "The Art of Running" by Rosalind C. Lloyd; while M. Christian provides a mesmerizing view of an up-and-coming swimmer's relationship with water in "Naiad." Unsurprisingly, those popular lesbian team sports are represented. Volleyballs are "Spiked" by Laurel Hayworth, in a story about healing old wounds and looking for greener courts. "Legend of Teddi Jo" by Gina Ranalli has a few things to say about softball and doing what and whom one loves.

Lest one think this anthology is mostly for the fiercely athletic, there are several amusing entries that feature women who, well, never really passed the President's Council on Physical Fitness Awards in school. Like the delightfully Walter Mitty-esque, adolescent "butch in training" starring in "Black Belt Theater" by Catherine Lundoff, and finding herself along the way. There's the strangely sweet encounter with rock climbing in "Going Up" by Anne Seale as a woman frees herself from a dead-end relationship and finds her own strength. Trixi's "Mulligan on the Green" is the charming story of golf and a young fan on her 18th birthday.

Perhaps this reader's favorite -- for the narrator's sharp wit and cynical view of aerobics -- is Dawn Dougherty's "Sports Dyke." The unnamed, less fit narrator decides to take a class after chatting with a woman in the locker room. After all she muses, "I've done worse things than yoga to get a girl horizontal." (p196). The class and the evening hold a few surprises and the woman discovers a "gym that satisfies all [her] needs." (p205)

The stories in Body Check include a wide range of sports, athletic skill, dynamics, humor, characters, and settings. This anthology should be part of every lesbian's sports gear. As Foster urges in her introduction, readers will be inspired to get sweaty tonight.


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