Laura Meets Jeffrey

Literary Erotica: Laura Meets Jeffrey

About The Book:

Laura meets Jeffrey at an upscale New York City brothel in 1980. They share an apocalyptic orgasm, fall in lust, and begin an epic erotic adventure. Everything in their memoir, as bizarre as it seems, actually happened.

Laura is exploring her submissive/slave side, and wants to be whipped and used by as many men as possible. Jeffrey, dominant by nature, becomes her master. For three years he brings to life her most shocking fantasies as they explore threesomes with porn stars, orgies with the rich, public whippings at BDSM sex clubs and anonymous sex at glory holes.

Laura, 27, is a lingerie model and flower child. Jeffrey, 33 and an amateur boxer, was the media wizard for Apple Records, and created the explicit sex magazine, Puritan.

Jeffrey Michelson’s reflections on fighting and (fornicating) are like a bolt of bourbon, a careening chronicle of orgies, S & M, hanging and banging with the stars, and related calisthenics.

James Wolcott

VANITY FAIR

About the Authors:

Jeffrey Michelson retired in 2009, after two decades of directing TV commercials, to work on his horse ranch, grow organic vegetables, and finish this book.

Two geniuses shaped Jeffrey s life. In 1967, he was houseboy and sparring partner to Norman Mailer and they remained close friends. In 1970, John Lennon chose Jeffrey s ad campaign for his album Imagine and asked Jeffrey to design Apple Records media.

In 1976, Jeffrey created Puritan and guided the explicit sex magazine to respect with outstanding photography and revealing interviews with heavy hitters like Mailer, Timothy Leary, Tennessee Williams, Terry Southern and Hunter S. Thompson.

After Laura, in the mid 1980s in London, Jeffrey fronted the cult-favorite rock band Max & The Broadway Metal Choir. In 1984 he also produced Artcore, a hard-core erotic coffee table book photographed in Paris, London and Los Angeles. While shooting in L.A. he was arrested for pornography and faced a mandatory three-year sentence until the California Supreme Court ruled he was not only not guilty but factually innocent.

Laura Bradley, jewelry designer and mother of three, wishes to remain anonymous.