Lusty Literature

By: Julia Robertson
  • Summary

  • “Lusty Literature” is hosted by Julia Robertson, actor, writer and lover of saucy books. Described as “PBS After-Dark”, each episode stars steamy excerpts from racy novels and/or sexy poems. Plus, you’ll learn about the lives of famous writers from John Donne to Edith Wharton. (Warning: this show discusses more boobs than “Bridgerton” and offers more gasps than “Masterpiece Theatre”.) #Romance #Poetry #Satire
    2024 Julia Robertson
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Episodes
  • S1E7 - Episode Seven The Rebel
    Sep 28 2024

    The writer Colette was so famous in her homeland of France that when she died there in the 1950s, Colette was honored to a state-funeral. Her most famous novella “Gigi” was adapted into an Oscar-winning movie, whilst her novel “Cheri” was made into a film starring Michelle Pfeiffer. Colette’s personal life also made headlines: one night, whilst working as a nude music hall performer at the famed Moulin Rouge club, Colette and her then lover, the niece of Emperor Napoleon the Third, apparently sparked a near audience riot, when she and her lover simulated sex onstage.

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    19 mins
  • S1E6 - Episode Six The Trailblazer
    Sep 21 2024

    Edith Wharton, the American Gilded-Age writer, born into opulence, often “wrote what she knew”. And “who” Edith knew were millionaires - corporate titans who traveled the world and who’d never get on their knees to scrub a toilet bowl all around its rim.

    Edith also knew about, and wrote about, living within an emotionally cold, sexless marriage (a theme underscoring her Pulitzer Prize winning novel, "The Age of Innocence”).

    And Edith knew about affairs; her lust-filled poem “Terminus” written by her beneath warm crumpled sheets, the morning-after she experienced shenanigans with a well-known cad.

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    19 mins
  • S1E5 - Episode Five The Prisoner
    Sep 14 2024

    John Cleland was born in England in 1710 into a family with literary connections: his father, a civil servant, friends with Alexander Pope - the second most-quoted-writer in “The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations”.

    Yet John Cleland wound up in prison writing and re-editing his manuscript, for what became, FANNY HILL. The notorious oft-banned novel famed for its colorful descriptions of massive appendages.

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    15 mins

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