Book Review: The Thrill of the Chaste by Dawn Eden

Dawn Eden quite literally bares her soul in The Thrill of the Chaste to show by personal experience that Sex and the City feminism doesn't work nor does it produce happiness. What makes her "everyone's second favorite scary conservative Catholic" is that her book is the heat-seeking missile of reality smashing full-speed into the delusion of casual sex as fulfillment.

Dawn is brutally honest in the book about her history and the effect it has had on her life. Usually the cliché word used to describe such books is "refreshing." In this case, the better word is "disquieting" because it directly challenges deeply ingrained notions about sex and dating. It exposes Sex and the City feminism for responding to misogyny with misandry. Unintentional misandry perhaps, but misandry nonetheless.

As a defense of Christian chastity, it pulls no punches. For the sake of discussion on issues of sex, Christians have been at a disadvantage for decades against the free sex crowd. For instance, certain feminists like to brag that we can "finally have a discussion about the female orgasm." Christians aren't beyond such discussions, they simply believe that those discussions take place between husband and wife and see no need to air the conjugal laundry in public.

That said, by not discussing sex in open yet modest terms, Christian sexual ethics have become quickly discarded and not part of the debate. Arguments like "because God says so" don't work in a room full of adults. Dawn, by bringing in personal detail, not only displays great courage but provides powerful refutation to cherished sexual notions that do far more harm to women than they have ever done good. Sex and the City feminism has made it all but impossible for men and women to relate to each other as people. Women enter the "dating world" without the tools to have a relationship… aside from the one in the bedroom. There is a lot of talk and dating advice about people as "sexual beings" as if that was the only aspect of their humanity.

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Article Author: John Bambenek

John Bambenek is a freelance columnist and author. He is the author of Illinois Deserves Better and is an information security professional, part of the Internet Storm Center and a courseware author and certification grader for the GIAC family of security certifications. …

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  • 1 - A Concerned Citizen

    Dec 13, 2006 at 10:25 pm

    Your review got me very interested, but I think you could have included a little more detail about what exactly the book contains.

    All in all, a good review. Thank you, Mr. Bambenek.

  • 2 - zingzing

    Dec 14, 2006 at 6:34 pm

    that's the problem with christians... they see the world as this big bad place, in need of christian help.

    this sex and the city metaphor goes a little far. have you (or the author) ever really watched the show? i've seen it enough (3 or 4 times) to know that the pitfalls of "free sex" are on display quiet often. and committed relationships get equal airtime. (otherwise, how are you going to show the pitfalls of committed relationships?)

    you (and the author) act as if the rest of the world doesn't know that sex can lead you into trouble, be it physical or emotional. we know it. sometimes we choose to ignore it, just to get laid. but no one is fooling themselves.

    this book probably needed to be written, but it's got a built-in audience. chistians need a pat on the back. the rest of the world doesn't need anyone trying to pass this off as some sort of "christian" morality, when it is just common sense.

    and blaming society's relationship problems on feminism (sex and the city feminism, no less,) is just plain stupid. do you really think that men and women related better in 1806 than they do in 2006? maybe you don't... i, on the other hand, have a wonderful relationship with a woman. she's my best friend and the one person on this planet that i am hopelessly attracted to.

    when a woman is free to be who she wants to be, that's a good thing. i hope we can all agree on that.

    trying to remove sex from a relationship is a big mistake, not a good idea.

  • 3 - John Bambenek

    Dec 14, 2006 at 7:27 pm

    "We" aren't removing sex from a relationship, it's "you" removing relationships from sex.

  • 4 - IgnatiusReilly

    Dec 14, 2006 at 7:42 pm

    If you can't get the first sentence right, why sould we take the rest of the story seriously?

    "Dawn Eden quite literally bares her soul in The Thrill of the Chaste to show by personal experience that Sex and the City feminism doesn't work nor does it produce happiness [for her]."

    No doubt it didn't, but one person's experiences don't always translate into everyone's. Do you want to live your life according to what works for some stranger? I could produce just as many ancedotes about people who are happy having sex or doing drugs.

    I don't get the pun, so using "meet" instead of the more traditional, and more accurate, term "meat" market makes no sense.

  • 5 - zingzing

    Dec 14, 2006 at 7:52 pm

    ""We" aren't removing sex from a relationship, it's "you" removing relationships from sex."

    oh, bullshit. you know it, i know it. sure, there are a lot of people (christians included) having a lot of meaningless sex, and they know the dangers of it. face it, they probably have a better idea of the dangers than most. but, there are just as many non-christians involved in meaningful sexual relationships, and they don't have christianity to thank for that.

    and again, john takes one sentence, attaches an accusation to it, and ignores the rest of what everyone else has to say. how christian of you, johnny.

  • 6 - Leslie Bohn

    Dec 14, 2006 at 7:56 pm

    Actually, Mr. Bambenek can't even get the first clause of his review right.

    I won't think I'm the omly one wondering just how the author "quite literally bares her soul." Not just literally, but "quite literally."

    When I read that, my head quite literally popped off my head and exploded.

  • 7 - John Bambenek

    Dec 14, 2006 at 9:30 pm

    Leslie-

    At least you admit you're brainless when posting your trollish comments.

    :)

  • 8 - GnipGnop

    Dec 15, 2006 at 9:31 am

    Got it. We agree that it's a good thing for a woman to be who she wants to be, but if she chooses to be a chaste Christian, she at least should keep her opinion to herself and not offer help to those who choose to seek it, because that's...[your]...problem with Christians. (I put in the "your" because one person's experiences don't always translate into everyone's.)

  • 9 - zingzing

    Dec 15, 2006 at 1:34 pm

    almost. most everything you say is true, gnipgnop, but one shouldn't couch one's opinion of common sense in some sort of bullshit christian power-move.

    i'm just saying it's arrogant and manipulative.

    and john, even if leslie's grammar is no better than yours, she still gets her point across.

  • 10 - pelinka

    Mar 23, 2007 at 3:44 pm

    Funny, many people will say that Christians push "our" morals down others' throats. Personally, I wouldn't care if Dawn was an atheist, a Wicca follower or Buddhist. In fact, I would've been thrilled, because I'm tired of the whole "Bible-thumping" slogan when we do, write or say something, but secular authors can write or say anything and be published without the certitude that they will get criticized. If she wasn't Christian, it would prove that the message of the book is not only recognized by "religious people" but by people in general, people who have been through this and is tired of casual sex and tired of being told "no, just because it's bad" by some rules without an explanation. Christians do not feel the "keepers" of the truth, because the truth is for everyone to see. If everyone saw the truth, through “common sense”, and lived accordingly, the world would not need religion to gives us guidance, and there would be no need for this kind of books.

    You are right, zingzing, many Christians have meaningless sex. And that is wrong! Wow, Eden is criticizing Christians too! We should rise up in arms, how dares she…..

    If any of you have read the book, you would see that the moral of the story is chastity, not abstinence. Chastity means not using others for one's benefit or pleasure, but to appreciate them as whole beings, outside and in marriage, Christian or not. Casual sex does that, takes women AND men as partial beings, only good for one or two things, for a small period of time. Appreciation is different to respect (because you may say, these are two consensual adults).

    Anyway, a final comment. Christians do not see the world as a big bad place, or at least, not ONLY as that. The world DOES have many bad things, but it is also full of so many beautiful things, people, and opportunities. Would you say that the world is perfect? In addition, we are not the only religious group to profess this. Because we believe in the goodness of the world, we have a moral responsibility to do something to improve things. Not to do so would be completely selfish, Christian or not.

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