The recent excavation of a thread on the subject of breast enhancement (with the original post dated 2010, in the General Cuckoldry section) reminded me of a book that women considering enhancement, and men who consider themselves "breast men," might find interesting. It is:
Seligson, Susan, 2007, "Stacked: A 32DDD Reports From the Front" (Bloomsbury, 228 pp. [hardcover]).
According to the dust jacket: "In 'Stacked,' this intrepid 32DDD writer takes us on a journey through a culture where breasts have come to stand for all that is woman. Seligson introduces us to the proud owners of the world's largest augmented breasts, crusaders for the right to parade bare-chested in public, and women pining for larger breasts or smaller ones, who may resort to surgery or stranger fixes (breast-enhancing gum? giant suction cups?) to get the breasts of their dreams. She relates the history of the bra and takes us on a quest for the perfect one. She explores the thinking of surgeons who do hundreds of breast implants a year, academics suspicious of our changing standards of femininity, and the editor of "Busty Beauties" magazine. And, she writes throughout with the wisdom and humor of a woman who knows what it is to wield body parts so powerful they can make men crash cars."
It's a pretty good read.
Seligson, Susan, 2007, "Stacked: A 32DDD Reports From the Front" (Bloomsbury, 228 pp. [hardcover]).
According to the dust jacket: "In 'Stacked,' this intrepid 32DDD writer takes us on a journey through a culture where breasts have come to stand for all that is woman. Seligson introduces us to the proud owners of the world's largest augmented breasts, crusaders for the right to parade bare-chested in public, and women pining for larger breasts or smaller ones, who may resort to surgery or stranger fixes (breast-enhancing gum? giant suction cups?) to get the breasts of their dreams. She relates the history of the bra and takes us on a quest for the perfect one. She explores the thinking of surgeons who do hundreds of breast implants a year, academics suspicious of our changing standards of femininity, and the editor of "Busty Beauties" magazine. And, she writes throughout with the wisdom and humor of a woman who knows what it is to wield body parts so powerful they can make men crash cars."
It's a pretty good read.