Typically, "I get an eye-roll, or 'I'd never read that,' or 'Are you kidding?' " Pomeroy said.Ī few women "couldn't get past the poor quality of writing and gave up."īut the response from clients who picked up the book has largely been positive, she said. She estimates that she has suggested "Fifty Shades of Grey" - and other books like it - to women about 30 times in the past year "to throw into the mix of things to reactivate your brain and body." "The book is good for triggering the imagination, and the idea of having sex." Pomeroy occasionally recommends the book to clients hoping to rekindle romance in a relationship. Her professional opinion, however, has been more supportive. Her personal opinion: "I thought it was kind of steamy in parts, but horribly written." It was spring 2012, and the erotic romance novel had hit best-seller lists in a big way. Johns County had been asked to talk about the book on a local radio show. The clinical sexologist and licensed mental health counselor in St. Noelle Pomeroy read "Fifty Shades of Grey" as a professional homework assignment.
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