|
Creating a good personal profile essay for online dating can be difficult.
MyProfileWriter allows
you to create one without typing, just by clicking! MyProfileWriter also offers
hundreds of clever headlines to help your profile stand out.
Find out more >
The Beautiful Woman Syndrome: What
is it? How does it affect them? How does it affect you?
The beautiful woman syndrome will affect most men who
pursue gorgeous women. However, most men won't recognize the symptoms of the
beautiful woman syndrome, nor will they know how to effectively deal with it. Do
you? Find out on
www.bwsyndrome.com
| |
 |
The Science of Sex
Enhancing Sexual Pleasure, Performance, Attraction, and Desire
by Kevin Pezzi, MD
You are
probably thinking, "I don't need to buy his book. I can read
about sex for free on thousands of web sites."
Yes, you can, but even if you
spent the rest of your life doing that, you still wouldn't know
many of the things in my book. No doctor in the world knows more
about sexual pleasure than I do. Don't believe me? Then read
some books by various experts on sex, check out a thousand
sexual web sites, and then read my book. You will be stunned by
how much more I know. Here's what one reader said:
"This book completely blows away any other sex book, by a
country mile. To borrow an old European country saying: first comes this
book, then there's a loooooong stretch where there's nothing . . . then
there's a big pile of manure . . . then another long stretch of
nothing . . . then every other book on the market. Well, it's
funnier in German. :-) Anyway, you can go to any
bookstore, and replace the entire sex section with this book."
|
| |
|
|
Cast away your preconceptions of sex books as
being a rehash of things you already know and hence a waste of time. By
reading this book, you will learn things that Dr. Ruth and other sexologists
have never considered. |
| |
Buying The
Science of Sex won't cost you money, it will save you
money, because you get the following book free with every order:

Click for a larger image
Gas Saving Tips
That Can Save You
Hundreds of Dollars Per Year!
Includes tips found
only in this e-book. Even if you think you know how to save gas, you'll
learn new ways in Gas Saving Tips. |
| |
|
Order The Science of Sex |
Do
you want to obtain more pleasure from sex? Do
you want to prolong your orgasms and increase your potential for multiple
orgasms? Do you want to give more
pleasure to your partner? Do you
want to be irresistible to the opposite sex?
If so, this is the book for you.
Here
are some more things you will learn by reading The Science of Sex:
 |
How to trigger a "second puberty" of penile growth that also rekindles libido
and sexual sensation
|
 |
How to easily make sexual lubricants at home that are better than anything you
can buy, far cheaper, and all natural.
|
 |
Which foods and nutrients affect libido? What citrus fruit can reduce libido?
|
 |
Learn how alfalfa sprouts, yogurt, or styrofoam might sabotage your sex life.
|
 |
How common household chemicals and products can reduce libido and sexual
pleasure.
|
 |
Can drinking tea instead of coffee affect your libido?
|
 |
What drug—besides testosterone—is the closest thing we have to a sexual
Fountain of Youth?
|
 |
What drug can you take to enhance sexual pleasure and achieve multiple orgasms?
Hint: it is available now, and it isn’t Viagra.
|
 |
Why can some perfumes and colognes diminish libido and reduce sexual pleasure?
|
 |
Which antihistamine drug intensifies sexual pleasure?
|
 |
The surprising sexual effects of melatonin, obesity, alcohol, and fiber.
|
 |
How to modulate your hormone levels to stimulate sexuality.
|
 |
Sniffing this can heighten libido and sexual pleasure. What is it?
|
 |
How stress affects your body and sex life — it’s not just “in your head.”
|
 |
Most people accept a reduction in libido and sexual sensation as a normal
consequence of aging. Learn what you can do to prevent or reverse this decline.
|
 |
Vitamins and minerals that affect sexual pleasure.
|
 |
Drugs that affect sexual pleasure.
|
 |
The surprising effects of sunlight: both good and bad.
|
 |
Received anything through an IV lately? Learn what your doctor gave you
besides the IV fluid and the medicine in it.
|
 |
Ever hear of a tip condom or a subcondom? If sexual pleasure
means anything to you, you should know about them.
|
 |
The sexual effects of chocolate: you haven't heard half the story.
|
 |
Learn how genes affect your sex life, and discover ways to compensate for
genetic disadvantages.
|
 |
True or false? Two vibrators will impart the same sensations if they have
the same shape and run at the same frequency and intensity level.
False! Once you read my discussion of waveforms and how the
Fourier Theorem applies to sex
(it's not just of interest to egghead mathematicians!), you will clearly
understand why things that superficially appear identical can produce remarkably
different levels of sexual pleasure.
|
 |
What Accutane®
can do to your sex life . . . and what you can do about it.
|
 |
Herbs that decrease libido and sexual
pleasure.
|
 |
An antihypertensive drug that improves
sexual performance.
|
 |
Why your shirt or blouse might affect your
libido. Seems strange, doesn't it? It isn't. Learn about the
hormonal link.
|
 |
Ask yourself this question: when was the
last time you heard about a sex toy that was a genuine invention and not just a
minor modification of a device that's been around for years? In The
Science of Sex, you will learn about several truly new devices that can make
sex better in ways you've never dreamed of.
|
 |
Learn about something you can buy at any
hardware store that can improve your sex life.
|
 |
Understanding what sensations the other sex
experiences during intercourse. You won't find a more comprehensive
explanation anywhere. This information does more than just satisfy
your curiosity — it will help you to become a better lover.
|
 |
A new way to retard skin aging.
|
Order The Science of Sex
FOR
MEN
 |
How
to increase testosterone production naturally to improve your sex life,
physique, mood, and health.
|
 |
Learn how to make your testosterone more effective.
|
 |
How
condoms can be used to increase pleasure.
|
 |
How
to enlarge your penis, and how to compensate for a lack of size.
|
 |
Learn what matters besides penile size and technique.
|
 |
What is the average penile size? You've probably read some inaccurate
statistics. Find out the truth.
|
 |
You
might experience multiple orgasms and not know it. Seems implausible?
It won't after you read this section.
|
 |
How
to give your partner the sexual fulfillment she craves.
|
 |
How
to improve the sensitivity of your penis.
|
 |
Discover what soy foods can do to your sex life.
|
 |
Learn about a new type of peter pump that can substantially
improve the pleasure you give to your partner. The key? This device does more
than just enlarge your penis.
|
 |
A
solution to the problem that most couples face during oral sex: what to do
when the man climaxes. Most women prefer to pull off before ejaculation,
but men would have more pleasurable orgasms if the woman did not pull off.
In The Science of Sex, I discuss how to solve this problem so that both
partners get what they want. Unless you've already read my discussion of
this elsewhere, you've never heard of this solution before. Other sex
authors are busy rehashing the same tired old facts, while I have many
groundbreaking tips to pass along. This is just one of them, and it alone
is worth the price of the book.
|
FOR
WOMEN
 |
Non-surgical ways of increasing your breast size.
|
 |
How
to maintain your breast shape.
|
 |
Facilitating multiple orgasms: even if you don't naturally have them, you
can.
|
 |
How
to improve the sensitivity of your clitoris and vagina, and make sex feel
better.
|
 |
Do
you know that douching and antibiotics can decrease your sexual
desirability?
|
 |
Why
soy makes wrinkles more likely.
|
 |
Are
phytoestrogens your friend or foe? Learn the surprising truth.
|
 |
True or false? Estrogen drops only after menopause. False!
|
 |
Why
are some vaginas better than others? Tightness is just one of the many factors.
Learn how to make your vagina more gratifying.
|
 |
Learn how dieting can adversely affect your vagina.
|
 |
You’ve probably heard of the pubococcygeus muscle—the one tightened by Kegel
exercises. Learn about the other vaginal muscles that Kegels don’t touch.
|
 |
Read about a device that improves vaginal texture, tightness, and sensation.
|
 |
Discover a better way of treating menopause. Estrogen? No.
Progesterone? No. Herbs? No. Phytoestrogens? No. It's better
than all those!
|
 |
Can
your medications affect how your vagina feels to your partner? Sure, it'll
feel good . . . but will it feel great?
|
 |
Learn why women with the same estrogen level can exhibit different
estrogen effects.
|
 |
What you need besides estrogen to maximize its effects and make you as
beautiful and sexy as possible.
|
 |
You've heard the saying: "Milk, it does a body good." But what does
it do to your sex life?
|
 |
Are
sex toys made from jelly polymers safe?
|
 |
The
female prostate: myth or reality?
|
Order The Science of Sex
Some of the topics in The Science of Sex:
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC)
genes | Scent | The Pill | Colognes and perfumes | Testosterone |
Pheromones | Realm® | Breasts | Estrogens | Phytoestrogens |
Xenoestrogens | Dihydrotestosterone | 5-alpha reductase | Soap |
Catechins | Evening primrose oil | Linoleic acid | Linolenic acid |
Finasteride | Heat | Cold | Collagen | Smoking | Stress | Obesity | Libido | Sexual pleasure | LDL cholesterol | HDL cholesterol |
Impotence | Vaginal lubrication | Thyroid | Estradiol |
Neurotransmitters | Serotonin | Tryptophan | Vitamin B6 |
Vitamin B12 | Folic acid | Proteins | Carbohydrate | Prozac® | Neuropeptide Y | Galanin |
Endorphins | Pectin | Calcium | Exercise | Vitamin C | Noise | Sleep | Dopamine | Melatonin | Sexual sensitivity | Leydig cells | Luteinizing hormone | Hypothalamus | Vaginal texture | Vaginal engorgement | Menopause | Hysterectomy |
Orchitis | Alcohol | Monounsaturated fats | Vegetarianism | Testicular
massage | Varicoceles | Diabetes | Depression | Hemochromatosis |
Potassium | Zinc | Cadmium | Aromatase | Estrone |
Testosterone-to-estrogen ratio | Genistein | Phytates | Copper |
Cytochrome P450 system | Indole-3-carbinol | Grapefruit juice | Licorice | Garlic | Resveratrol | Ethinyl
estradiol | Cruciferous vegetables | Aryl hydrocarbon receptor | Dioxins | Antibiotics | Bacteria | Enterohepatic recycling | Oral contraceptives | Fiber | Competitive inhibition | Exogenous estrogens | Isoflavones |
Soy | Antiandrogens | Receptors | Sex hormone binding globulin | Free
testosterone | Albumin | Bioavailable testosterone | Cirrhosis |
Anorexia nervosa | Stinging nettle | Nephrotic syndrome | Saturated fat | Sexual response | Androgens | Hormone replacement therapy | Genes |
Testosterone resistance | Andropause | Proscar® | Penis size | Saw palmetto | Tagamet®
| Prozac® | Zoloft® | Paxil® | Ketoconazole | Opiates | Glycyrrhizin |
Ginger | Selegiline | Monoamine oxidase | Norepinephrine | Epinephrine | Catecholamines | Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) drugs |
AndroGel™ | Androderm® | Testoderm®
|
Estratest® | Methyltestosterone | DHEA | Androstenedione |
Androstenediol | Yohimbine | Yohimbe | Aphrodisiacs | Multiple orgasms | Clitoris | Kegel exercises | Avena sativa | Herbs |
Bromocriptine | Hyperprolactinemia | Breastfeeding | Ginseng |
Progesterone | Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate | Homocysteine | Nitric oxide |
Boron | Apomorphine | Bupropion | Amantadine | Caffeine | Terpenoids | Trazodone | Levodopa | Damiana | Sunlight | Phenylalanine | Fear | Sympathetic nervous system | Autonomic nervous system | Arousal residue | Excitation transfer | Chocolate | Phenylethylamine | Anandamide |
Tyrosine | Styrene | Plastics | Pesticides | Herbicides | Insecticides | Fungicides | Endosulfan | Vinclozolin | DDE | DDT | Pyrethroids | Permethrin | Atrazine | Orgasm intensity | Copulins | Estriol |
Designer estrogens | Vaginotropic effect | Milk | Galactose |
Para-aminobenzoic acid (PABA) | Puberty | Menarche | Guaifenesin |
Transudation | Foreplay | Vaginal tightness | Post-receptor effects |
Subordination | Spinnbarkheit | Ovulation | Cyproheptadine | Benadryl®
| High blood pressure | Thirst | Xanthan gum | Guar gum |
Carrageenan | Enhancin | Douching | Cervix | Sensate variation |
Lecithin | Oxytocin | Vasopressin | Antidiuretic hormone | Ginkgo biloba | Nicotine | Prostaglandins | Glucocorticoids | Prednisone | Periactin®
| Parlodel® | Uterus | Anorgasmy | Pregnancy |
Condoms | Skin | Polymers | Labia minora | Subcondom | Pubococcygeus | Perineometer | Ischiocavernosus | Bulbocavernosus | Bulbospongiosus | Crura | Corpus cavernosum | Corpus spongiosum | Vaginal weights |
Vaginal smooth muscles | Ballooning | Tenting | Vag-TTS
| Parasympathetic system |
Bartholin’s glands | Cowper’s glands | Acetylcholine | Homologous
structures | Viagra® | Phentolamine | Vasoactive intestinal
polypeptide | Arginine | Misoprostol | Sudafed® | Ephedrine | Phenylephrine | Vaginotonic effect | Extracorporeal magnetic innervation | Neuromuscular electrical stimulation | Vaginal tightening wedge |
Penile wedge |
Ejaculation | Refractory period | Latency period | Status orgasmus |
Eros Clitoral Therapy Device | IUDs | Accutane® | Cesarean
sections | Phosphodiesterase 5 | Cyclic guanosine monophosphate | Pain |
Vaginismus | Vestibulitis | Endometriosis | Alprostadil | MUSE®
|
Caverject® | Essential fatty acids | Phrynoderma |
Alpha-linolenic acid | Eicosapentanoic acid | Docosahexanoic acid |
Dihomogamma-linolenic acid | Gamma-linolenic acid | Delta-6-desaturase |
Cyclooxygenase | Elongase | Pfiesteria piscicida | Magnesium |
Trans fatty acids | Hydrogenated fats | Partially hydrogenated fats | Cis
fats | Margarine | Butter | Borage seeds | Niacin | Vitamin A |
Aspirin | Vitamin E | Alfalfa sprouts | Canavanine | Grape juice | Red
wine | Omega-3 fats | Superoxide | Superoxide dismutase | Carotenoids | Selenium | Flavonoids | Daidzein | Naringenin | Quercetin |
Anthocyanidins | Cocoa | Pudendal nerves | Lutein | Zeaxanthin |
Lycopene | Lead | Phosphorous | Iron | Dimenhydrinate | Clomipramine | Nitroglycerin | Minoxidil | Melanotan II | Molybdenum | Choline |
Inositol | Shyness | Elastin | Tunica albuginea | Cross-linking |
Glycation | G-spot | Skene's glands | Paraurethral glands |
Prostate gland | Vestibular bulbs | Clitoral bulbs | Clitoral glans |
Clitoral corpus | Mucosa | Lamina Propria | Muscularis | Adventitia |
Fibrosa | Nerve receptors | Meissner's corpuscles | Pacinian corpuscles | Merkel’s disks | Bare nerve endings | Touch | Thermoreception |
Sensory adaptation | Phalloplasty | Alkylphenol ethoxylates | Nonylphenols | Organochlorines | Bisphenol-A | Phthalates |
Beta-hexachlorocyclohexane | Penile weights | Peter pumps | Segmented peter
pumps | Fenton
reaction | Bioflavonoids | Diosmin | Rosemary | Vacuum constrictor
device | Sexual nerves | Labia majora | Prepuce | Vestibule | Hymen | Testes | Vibrators | Penile fracture | Blue balls syndrome | Coital
alignment technique | Tip condoms | Nonoxynol-9 | Norplant® | Depo-Provera® | Perimenopause | Cul-de-sac | Rectouterine
pouch | Fornix | Yogurt | Lactobacillus acidophilus | Lactobacillus
crispatis | Lactobacillus jensenii | Lactobacillus gasseri |
Menstrual cycle | Contraceptives | Bacteriocins
| How dynamic conformational changes
affect sexual pleasure
| Nutrition | Vaginal flora | Coffee | Tea |
Sensory fidelity |
Waveforms and sexual pleasure | Facial morphology and sexual attraction | Neural
encoding
Order The Science
of Sex
Book length:
255,563 words, 516 (or more) large
pages (~ 7 x 11 inches). Illustrated (some in color). Includes a
user-friendly index — not one of those indexes created by lazy authors that
look like this:
Aphrodisiacs 39, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 61,
65, 66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 72
I detest such indexes because the reader has to check each one
of those pages to possibly locate what he's seeking. Here is an excerpt
from my index:
Aphrodisiacs. See
also libido
alcohol, 88
amantadine, 85
androstenediol, 72
androstenedione may not work, 72
apomorphine, 84
Avena sativa, 78
boron, 84
bromocriptine, 79
bupropion, 84
cadmium in oysters, 46
caffeine, 85
chocolate, 89
damiana, 86
DHEA not a sure-fire benefit, 71
dihydrotestosterone, 70
effects of saw palmetto, 62
exercise, 88
fear, 88
ginseng, 81
licorice, 64
methyltestosterone, 70
miscellaneous herbs, 86
nutmeg, 67
phenylalanine, 87
selegiline, 68
sunlight, 87
testosterone, 69
understanding why response may vary, 68
vitamin B6, 82
yohimbe, 78
yohimbine, 74
Such an index is much easier to use, because if you wish to see
how selegiline (for
example) functions as an aphrodisiac, you can
immediately see that topic is discussed on page 68. (Note: This
index excerpt is from an earlier edition of The Science of Sex. The
current edition discusses even more aphrodisiacs.)
100% Money-back Guarantee
If you find a book with a more comprehensive and detailed presentation of sexual
pleasure, performance, attraction, and desire, tell me about it and I will
refund your entire purchase price. I can confidently make this offer
because I've read hundreds of competitive books and have yet to find one that is
even remotely comparable. I've spent years of 100-hour weeks working on
this book, while some others in this genre appear to have been thrown together
over a long weekend. No reader has yet been able to suggest a comparable
book. Besides the fact that I cover more subjects in more detail and
present information that you cannot obtain elsewhere (unless someone is copying
me), I also correct some pervasive sexual fallacies (for examples of some of
them, see this page).
Order The Science
of Sex
Reader
comments
I'm really enjoying the book. I was skeptical as
usual but this book is right up my alley. Very scientific without being over my
head.
Joey Cross

This book completely blows away any other sex book, by a
country mile. To borrow an old European country saying: first comes this
book, then there's a loooooong stretch where there's nothing . . . then
there's a big pile of manure . . . then another long stretch of nothing . . .
then every other book on the market. Well, it's funnier in German. :-)
Anyway, you can go to any bookstore, and replace the entire sex section with
this book. Any sane publisher should jump on it, you can split the book into
ongoing volumes. Perhaps there is more profit in doing it this way, though I
don't know if the publicity a publisher could give could be matched. Getting
the book mentioned in good target audience media like Maxim or Stuff
would increase visibility a good deal as well. In any case, it's an awesome
product that can only grow.

Dr. Pezzi,
You spoiled my whole weekend!
I bought the book on Thursday and then proceeded to get *nothing*
done until I finished it many hours later on Sunday! The Science of Sex may have made me ineffective at getting my work done but it
made me much more effective with my lover. It was filled with great
information and real action items. I am very impressed and appreciative.
Scott in Seattle

Hello Dr. Pezzi,
I got it and it looks like it is everything I hoped it would be. Money well
spent!
Thank you, Josh

Dear Dr. Pezzi:
I assume from the size of the manuscript and the impeccable layout that you
intend to have it commercially bound and published at some point. I hope so,
because it is vastly superior to anything I have seen on the topic from a
medical view. As an example, though maybe not the best, the same day I stumbled
onto your site, I ordered a book on natural aphrodisiac supplements from a
self-proclaimed national sexpert (and evidently other-proclaimed as well, since
he has been interviewed on NBC Nightly News and in USA Today and Le Monde, among
others). The nicely bound 100-page book or booklet I got was a bland litany of
reputed aphrodisiacs and their claims, supported mainly by anecdotes and
days-long My Personal Experience which invariably led to a favorable review,
with only vaguely described "increased sexual interest" for most; telling me
more about his suggestibility than anything else. I realize I'm being way too
hard on the guy, who in all probability merely wanted to Keep It Simple. I have
nothing against anecdotes: contrary to the retort I once got from an attending
in school, anecdote is the singular of data; how could it be
otherwise? And the personal experience of a highly interested researcher is
always valuable; but in sexual matters, the placebo effect is so strong, it is
not enough. I don't know; I was just disappointed that so much of what is
printed on this subject is of a like character, whereas from such an expert I
would have expected authority, scholarship, sound criticism, integration, and
above all, creative insight. In short, I expected a book like yours! It's all
that.
So when will we see you interviewed in Le Monde?
A fellow M.D.

I am in the midst of reading The Science of Sex which I ordered from you
a couple of weeks ago - VERY interesting and very useful stuff. Well done.
Name withheld by request

Dear Dr. Pezzi:
Thanks so much. I just wanted to let you know how much I have enjoyed reading
The Science of Sex. What an amazing resource! Thanks for taking the time and
effort to do the research, present it eloquently and dispel the myths. In a
world with so much disinformation, your writings are very much appreciated.
Name withheld by request

I'm in love with the kind of books you write,
Kevin. By all means keep up the good work. I have lots of books in my bookcase,
but quite frankly, yours really rank among those I'd rate as most interesting. I
sure am not disappointed.
I guess you're now close to age 48, yet your physical appearance looks to me
(from the 2002 pics
I saw from your webpage) like you're in tiptop shape; your BMI, skin, your mind,
etc. My girlfriend had a look at the 2002 pic where it says you were 44˝, and
she too admitted you have good-looking skin and looked young. I see people in
their early 30s who look like they're in their late 40s, so calendar age is
definitely not the same as biological age. I may sound like I am layering it on
thick, but I'm simply granting you what's rightfully yours. You went deeper,
worked harder than other MDs, you went off the beaten track, and at the end of
the day, it pays off, so to this I say, way to go, well done, Kevin—there should
be more people like you out there.
Marc Boucher
Riviere-du-loup, Quebec, Canada

I've been trying the yohimbine...holy shiznit! A supplement that
actually works! I've been using it for less than a week, but the results are
incontrovertible. As I relate this, keep in my that I've had a cold for the
better part of the week, and feel generally pretty lousy. Nevertheless, when I
was talking to a woman at the office who flirts with me, I popped such a rod
that I had to hide it and explain away my laughter. ;-) I normally
encourage this process, since as you mention in the book, thoughts of sex can
increase testosterone levels, train erections, etc. But this was *rock* hard,
way out of the norm for casual flirting. That night I decided to masturbate just
to get to sleep easier, and noticed that when I was done I didn't feel the usual
"OK, I'm good for a few days" feeling. In fact I began to wonder if I could do
it again. I went for it again, and easily got the job done, total time between
attempts was a few minutes! Unthinkable! It could have been even sooner had I
thought of it. The next morning, I repeated the experiment again, and again was
able to go twice in rapid succession, where I'm normally a one-shot guy.
I also noticed that erections seemed to point a few degrees further north than
usual, and felt stiffer than usual, which of course is a great feeling. I was
able to quantitatively analyze the situation by using my vacuum pump. I have the
cylinder marked off with a permanent marker, so that any change in length at the
same pressure will be obvious. And there was the evidence: at the normal 4 in.
Hg., I was a quarter inch longer than normal, in a matter of days. I assume
circumference was even more affected, but this can only be explained by
increased pressure inside the penis, since the outside pressure was measured to
be the same. I can conclude that the yohimbine really does produce a larger,
stiffer erection, in addition to reducing refractory time and generally
increasing libido. And this at half the manufacturer's recommended dose, one
capsule a day instead of two. I noticed no other effects whatsoever. I don't
have a blood pressure cuff to see if my overall blood pressure is higher, or if
it's a penis-only effect. ;) I feel no tremors, nervousness, or any other
untoward effects.
In regard to the book in general, great job, and I'm impressed as always with
the added material (note from Pezzi: this reader read an earlier
edition of this book). I think the book will be enormously valuable to
anyone with the wherewithal to actually take the advice in it. It could be
particularly valuable to women, who while they may be reluctantly aware of the
importance of bodyfat in general, may be completely oblivious to the fact that
vaginal quality is a big factor in relationships. Simply doing Kegel exercises
could make a major difference in attractiveness and resulting quality of life.
Sad to say, and an enviable thing for men, but a woman with a great body and
great vagina can write her own ticket. A woman who takes initiative there is one
in a thousand.
No one can complain that you don't tell it like it is, and explain what to do
about it. It's safe to say there won't be any other book out there to touch this
one for interest level, straight talk, and practical advice. Congratulations!

Hello Dr. Pezzi,
Thank you for the wonderful book,
The Science of Sex! I have a
doctor's mindset and I really enjoyed reading your book very much. It
was a real pleasure to have something intellectual (and written by someone
very apt at that!) upon the subject of human sexuality! You clarified
several things for me, helped me to determine several supplements I should not
be taking (as a young man) and gave me many new insights into information
which I had no previous knowledge upon regarding this subject and similar
subjects.

Before I read your book, I thought that your statement about it
discussing "things that Dr. Ruth and other sexologists have never considered"
was probably hype. However, I was intrigued by some of the topics you
listed, so I bought it anyway. I think I owe you an apology for doubting
you. Your book is packed with information that, as you said, you can't get
elsewhere.
My wife and I have been reading one sex book after another for
years. We are always searching for new things to try out in the bedroom.
I agree with you that most authors tend to rehash what other authors have said,
because we don't learn many new facts from most books. But your book?
That could keep us busy for years!
Throughout my education and career, I've read many books.
I don't know exactly how many, but it's enough to fill half of my basement with
dozens of boxes. I can't recall ever being more thrilled by a book
exceeding my expectations than I have been with your book. The Science
of Sex is bound to be a classic, and THE manual for people seeking to
enhance their sex lives. Great job, doc.

Your discussion of tip condoms was worth ten times the price
of the book. It's enabled me to experience much more sexual pleasure.
I just wish that I'd known about this a decade ago!

Hello Dr. Pezzi,
Your cutting edge perspectives are fantastic!!
I experimented with several suggestions that are showcased in The Science of
Sex to fix my sexual sensory dysfunction and penile shrinkage (7.5 to 6.0
inches), perhaps induced by two cycles of Accutane. My brief story: 26
years old, healthy, athletic, hypogonadic with no sexual sensation when
ejaculating. Recently, I applied AndroGel to my scrotum. I concur
with your results: larger erections, smooth/firm texture, there is
definitely an awakening. I sincerely appreciate your mind and care for
people's pursuit of happiness.
Mike

I ordered your e-book a few weeks ago and am really enjoying it.
It's a great book so far, with lots of interesting information.
Marco

I've been reading about sex in magazines and countless books
for most of my adult life (I'm now 51 years old). I thought that I knew a
lot, and I generally do not learn much from reading sex books because most
of the topics presented by the authors are things I've already read ten
times. Nevertheless, I am always on the prowl for new nuggets of useful
info. Most authors teach me a few new things, but you taught me a lot about
things I'd never before considered . . . but now that I have, I was
spellbound by your discussions. I am not a fan of e-books, so I never
imagined that I would read one as long as yours. However, your book was
extremely interesting. You know more about sex than ANYONE. I also like the
way you make it so easy to contact you. Getting in touch with an average
author is next to impossible. Thank you for writing such a superbly
informative book, and thank you for giving me in-depth answers to the
questions I submitted to you.
Greg

Miscellaneous short comments
 |
Dr. Pezzi, I absolutely love The Science of Sex &
your website. I cannot put into words how much I appreciate and respect your
knowledge and attention to detail. |
 |
Your book is great. |
 |
I was very impressed with your book.
|
 |
I'm reading the book now . . . fascinating, extremely
well written, and an incredible bargain! |
 |
I purchased your book last summer. I've enjoyed it very
much and have recommended it to friends. It is amazing that you have so
much fascinating material brought together in one book.
|
 |
The Science of Sex is absolutely fascinating. I
was pre-med but went into marketing instead. I love getting down to the
logical, precise reasons for our sexual responses, so your book is an
addicting read. |
 |
Chalk me up as a new fan . . . Such great info in your
books! You're one of three people I wish I could meet someday in person
to shake their hand. And if you were giving book tours I'd be camping
out to get your signature (and a photo). |
 |
Dr. Pezzi, you are a genius! Your book is wonderful!
|
Order The Science
of Sex
Excerpts about copulins and other pheromones from
The Science of Sex
Home | My
Qualifications |
Questions
& Answers |
My other books | My relevant
inventions |
My other web sites |
Ask Dr. Pezzi |
Consult Dr. Pezzi
|