A fascinating history of desire and attraction, Knox’s dig into the archives runs from Enlightenment all the way to the present-day, and will reframe much of the way you think about this topic.
– Entertainment Weekly (The 50 most anticipated books of 2020)
“Sex is typically a behind-closed-doors event, but seduction, Knox states, has been in the spotlight since the beginning of time. From the Garden of Eden to the saloons and speakeasies of the Jazz Age, Knox’s book is an exploration of power, desire and free will.”
– PureWow (13 Books We Can't Wait to Read in February)
“What does seduction mean? And what counts as seduction? Knox is so skillful at setting up such questions, and at making you realize the possibilities are more complex than you think.”
– Vox
“[Seduction] is a rich field for Clement Knox. Like an R-rated version of A Christmas Carol, Knox’s history whisks us from Casanova’s mirrored sex suite to the rake culture of London.”
– New York Times Book Review
“Knox has written an ambitious book: part social commentary, part literary criticism, part legal history and populated with colorful biographies of players big and small in the world of wooing over the past 300 years.”
– Wall Street Journal
“The book’s quasibiographical approach provides an unusual but engaging way of addressing its central topic.”
– Library Journal
“An alluring and breathtaking history of enticement in the modern age. Knox’s fascinating book illustrates the magnetism of these [seduction] narratives as they draw us into their orbits and as we use them to offer explanations of individual and social behavior.”
– BookPage
“In a series of enticing stories that lure the reader between this book’s covers, Clement Knox reveals how seduction has at once fortified and transgressed cultural hierarchies. A must read for all seeking historical context to the fast-changing sexual politics of our own time.”
– Jay Sexton, author of A Nation Forged by Crisis: A New American History
“In a sweeping historical narrative, Clement Knox demonstrates that the tensions between passion and reason are the driving force animating the regulation of seduction worldwide. Knox’s captivating history draws upon a wide variety of sources—from Casanova’s diaries to sex-trafficking laws—to show that women have both shaped seduction narratives and been shaped by them: for better, and (usually) for worse.”
– Hallie Lieberman, author of Buzz