Sex and the High Command: Difference between revisions

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In ''Sex and the High Command'', a drug is invented (Vita-Lerp) that permits [[parthenogenesis|parthenogenetic reproduction]], and acts like a viagra for women to boot. Men are superfluous, and a women's movement decides to eliminate most or all of them. The protagonist, Captain Benjamin Franklin Hansen, is forced to choose between the High Command, which is seeking a military solution to the women's movement, and his love for and trust in his wife and daughter.  
In ''Sex and the High Command'', a drug is invented (Vita-Lerp) that permits [[parthenogenesis|parthenogenetic reproduction]], and acts like a viagra for women to boot. Men are superfluous, and a women's movement decides to eliminate most or all of them. The protagonist, Captain Benjamin Franklin Hansen, is forced to choose between the High Command, which is seeking a military solution to the women's movement, and his love for and trust in his wife and daughter.  


It is a good-natured take on the sex wars.  
It is a good-natured male perspective take on the sex wars. For a similar approach from decades earlier, see [[Robert Chambers]]' ''[[The Gay Rebellion]]''.




[[Category:1970 publications]]
[[Category:1970 publications]]
[[Category:Novels]]
[[Category:Novels]]
[[Category:Works with all-female species]]
[[Category:Works with sex wars]]

Latest revision as of 17:37, 7 April 2008

1970 edition

Sex and the High Command is a 1970 semi-humorous novel by John Boyd.

In Sex and the High Command, a drug is invented (Vita-Lerp) that permits parthenogenetic reproduction, and acts like a viagra for women to boot. Men are superfluous, and a women's movement decides to eliminate most or all of them. The protagonist, Captain Benjamin Franklin Hansen, is forced to choose between the High Command, which is seeking a military solution to the women's movement, and his love for and trust in his wife and daughter.

It is a good-natured male perspective take on the sex wars. For a similar approach from decades earlier, see Robert Chambers' The Gay Rebellion.