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Saw you go in those *** shops in Stockholm, she says. We sit outside a café in Oslo drinking coffee and eating creams cakes. Just looking at the books. Why? What so good about the ******* in the books and not us other girls? I sip the coffee and light up a cigarette from a pack; she takes one, too, and looks at me. It's a matter of posing. Posing? Yes, how they pose. She frowns, sips her coffee. We can pose like they do; it's more than that. I study her features, the eyes focusing, the lips part open, her hair curly and tight. It's the way they look at you from the photographs. How do they look? Haven't you seen those kinds of books or mags? Why would I? Curiosity? Never looked. I inhale cigarette smoke. I saw my first girly mag when I was at high school, when a friend brought one to school, and I thought: what the heck's that? Don't you find it belittles women? Some I saw weren't belittled any place. I mean as a ****** gender, Dalya says, grabbing me with her eyes. No, it's just dames posing in the **** or in skimpy gear showing what God gave them, I say. It cheapens women; makes them objects for men to pore over with their eyes and see as just that: objects, she says. I drain my coffee and put the cup down. Another coffee? No, I’ve not done with this one. I raise a hand and a waitress comes and I order another coffee; the waitress walks off, her black dressed *** swaying. What was it you were saying?
0
Jan 11, 2015
Jan 11, 2015 at 4:10 AM UTC
STOCKHOLM 1974.
Saw you go in those *** shops in Stockholm, she says. We sit outside a café in Oslo drinking coffee and eating creams cakes. Just looking at the books. Why? What so good about the ******* in the books and not us other girls? I sip the coffee and light up a cigarette from a pack; she takes one, too, and looks at me. It's a matter of posing. Posing? Yes, how they pose. She frowns, sips her coffee. We can pose like they do; it's more than that. I study her features, the eyes focusing, the lips part open, her hair curly and tight. It's the way they look at you from the photographs. How do they look? Haven't you seen those kinds of books or mags? Why would I? Curiosity? Never looked. I inhale cigarette smoke. I saw my first girly mag when I was at high school, when a friend brought one to school, and I thought: what the heck's that? Don't you find it belittles women? Some I saw weren't belittled any place. I mean as a ****** gender, Dalya says, grabbing me with her eyes. No, it's just dames posing in the **** or in skimpy gear showing what God gave them, I say. It cheapens women; makes them objects for men to pore over with their eyes and see as just that: objects, she says. I drain my coffee and put the cup down. Another coffee? No, I’ve not done with this one. I raise a hand and a waitress comes and I order another coffee; the waitress walks off, her black dressed *** swaying. What was it you were saying?
A COUPLE IN STOCKHOLM IN 1974 AND MEN'S MAGS.
terry-collett
Written by
Jan 11, 2015
Jan 11, 2015 at 4:10 AM UTC
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