Three in Love: Menages a Trois from Ancient to Modern Times
Barbara Foster, Letha Hadady, Michael Foster
Credits
Three's company and two is downsizing. At least that's life as seen through the six eyes of the authors of Three in Love: Menages a Trois from Ancient to Modern Times, who tell us they've had their own menage a trois since 1981 and have written this book a history of threesomes to establish a pedigree. But in spite of some sketchy psychology, they have a point well, maybe three points. Threesomes have been overlooked when not moralistically slandered; they aren't necessarily perverse or unstable; they turn up frequently in life and art. The book offers the familiar (Lord Nelson and the Hamiltons; Henry and June Miller and Anais Nin) and some surprises (a Communist menage for Lenin, a Nazi one for Goebbels, an Imperial Twilight one for Nehru and the Mountbattens). There's also the occasional grating noise of a definition being stretched (the Marquis de Sade's sex life was more menagerie than menage). It's racy and engaging, even if you think three is still, in general, a crowd. B+

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