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September 5, 2025

The Best Books on Sex Right Now (Updated)

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This post is updated to fix links and to add two new books for 2025.

Here's a question I get a lot:

"I love CAYA, but what book would you recommend for..." kids, tween, teens, folks with disabilities, and so on - and especially for MEN.

Fortunately, the last few years have seen an explosion of great, sex positive, gender inclusive, intersectionally feminist, pleasure-forward books about sex. Only a few of the books on this list aren't from the last five years! Two of the books have not yet been published!

We are living in a great age for sex ed books, my friends.

Keep this email and refer to it whenever you need it. Whenever possible, links go to my local bookseller, Book Moon Books. I do not get any renumeration beyond the privilege of having such a great shop in my area.


New for 2025:

Good Sex by Candice Nicole Hargons, Ph.D.

Good Sex by Candice Nicole Hargons, Ph.D.
Book Moon Books • Amazon

Good Sex won't just improve your sex life; it will show you how good sex can make the world a better place-for real.

Drink Water and Mind Your Business by Dr. Donna Oriowo

Drink Water and Mind Your Business by Dr. Donna Oriowo
Book Moon Books • Amazon

Drink Water and Mind Your Business is an essential book for surviving and thriving in the current era—or any era. It’s practical, funny, empathetic, shame-free, and joyful.

And on to the categories:

For young kids: What Makes a Baby by Cory Silverberg and Fiona Smyth

For tweens: Wait... What? by Heather Corinna and Isabella Rottman

For teens: Let's Talk About It by Erika Moen and Matthew Nolan

Let's Talk About It by Erika Moen and Matthew Nolan

For folks with disabilities: The Ultimate Guide to Sex and Disability by Miriam Kaufman, Cory Silverberg, and Fran Odette

For trans folks: Trans Sex: Clinical Approaches to Trans Sexualities and Erotic Embodiments by Lucie Fielding

Lucie’s book is targeted toward clinicians working with trans folks, but it's SO GOOD I recommend it for everyone.

Trans Sex: Clinical Approaches to Trans Sexualities and Erotic Embodiments by Lucie Fielding

On Menopause: What Fresh Hell Is This by Heather Corinna

For women with trauma histories or reproductive cancers: Better Sex through Mindfulness by Lori Brotto

For people want sex to be EXTRAORDINARY: Magnificent Sex by Peggy Kleinplatz and Dana Menard

Magnificent Sex by Peggy Kleinplatz and Dana Menard

For people seeking their first orgasm or who have difficulty with orgasms: Becoming Orgasmic by Julia Heiman and Joseph LoPiccolo

For people experiencing painful sex: Sex Without Pain: A Self-Treatment Guide to the Sex Life You Deserve by Heather Jeffcoat

For social justice: Pleasure Activism by adrienne maree brown

Pleasure Activism by adrienne maree brown

For science: Why Sex Matters by Bobbi Low

For fun: Like a Mother by Angela Garbes and Strange Bedfellows by Ina Park


and for men...

Look, this is a big one.

I get asked a lot, "Does ‘Come As You Are’ apply to men?" "Is there a ‘Come As You Are’ for men?" "Are you going to write a ‘Come As You Are’ for men?"

And I finally have an answer:

My typical answer has been yes sure definitely men can learn from CAYA, because so much of human sexuality is the same regardless of gender or genitals. And also I feel like I'm the wrong person to write a book specifically for men. And that's the 101 basic entry level way of thinking about that question.

There's a deeper answer.

CAYA centers women and femmes because for all of the history of science as we know it, research has centered men. Our understanding of everything from heart attacks to autism to covid itself - the false negative rate of the covid antibody test is 70% women - is based on how we understand men. And for centuries women have been reading work based on men and doing the work of extrapolating that information to their own experience. So in my tiny little corner of the world, I choose to center women and femmes. And I recognize that men are just as capable as anyone of reading research that does not center themselves and doing the work of extrapolating that information to their own experience. To believe anything less would be to belittle men's intellectual and emotional capacity.

And in fact, to take it one level further, I believe that that very experience of extrapolating to their own experience is itself a learning opportunity for men. In that way, the best possible book for men is CAYA, precisely because it centers women and femmes. It's better than any book that centers them, because it requires them to consider femininity as the center and masculinity as slightly to one side of center. And that's an important experience for (especially cisgender heterosexual) men to have!

So there you have it.

The best book for men is... Come As You Are.

come as you are by emily nagoski

Questions or comments? Please email my very tiny team at unrulywellness@gmail.com

Feel free to say hello on 📷 Instagram or 🤖 Facebook – I don't always reply but I read everything.

Signed copies of Come As You Are can be obtained from my amazing local bookseller, Book Moon Books.

Stay safe and see you next time.

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Join the discussion:
Gemcat
Sep. 6, 2025, midnight

My husband of 45 years and I read CAYA together. He said it made him examine his upbringing and the myths he had grown up with. He had no problem relating to your analogy of individual gardens of sexuality and looking at his own with wonder. We’ve spent many hours discussing the various chapters, what applies to each of us and to us together. I recommend CAYA to anyone wanting to expand their knowledge of sexuality.

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Chris Bashioum
Sep. 6, 2025, afternoon

I love this. My wife and I eagerly read everything you write and love it! I am a cis-hetero male and totally agree with you assertion that CAYA is the best sex book for men to read. I have purchased multiple copies and gave them to my sons-in-law as well as family friends. Thank-you so much for all that you do!

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Dethe Elza
Sep. 7, 2025, morning

As a man who read CAYA, I got a lot out of it and never felt like it wasn't for me. Centering women and femmes is exactly what most men need more of.

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Steve
Sep. 5, 2025, evening

Completely agree that CAYA can be read, understood and put into practice for men. I have learnt a lot, such as environment matters, mood, accelerators and brakes, communication and more.

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Dirk Nimmegeers
Sep. 5, 2025, evening

Dear Emily, thank you so much for all your witty, interesting, lovely messages. Thank you for being Emily Nagoski!😊

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