“Pornography is the secret engine that drives the adoption of most modern technology, videogames included. By connecting the dots (or rather, pixels) between interactive media and that most interactive of human experiences, Brown shows the pivotal role erotic content has played in the evolution of this new medium, as well as the furor and controversy it inevitably stirs up.”
SCOTT ALEXANDER,
Senior Editor, Playboy

“A stimulating look at two of today’s most controversial subjects… Sure to amaze and titillate anyone who’s ever hoisted a videogame controller.”
SCOTT STEINBERG,
CNN Tech Correspondent and Author of “Videogame Marketing and PR”

“Damon Brown tells the tale of the marriage of pop culture, video games, and porn with a geek’s glee and a historian’s attention to detail.”
AUDACIA RAY,
Author of “Naked on the Internet: Hookups, Downloads and Cashing In on Internet Sexploration”

“I have no idea why Damon Brown included Leisure Suit Larry in this book about all those dirty games, but I must agree with the U.S. Supreme Court: I can’t define a good game, but I know one when I see one!”
AL LOWE,
Creator of Leisure Suit Larry, www.allowe.com

“A thorough, meticulously researched history of video games and other adult entertainment, providing much food for thought about a generation that grew up taking all of it for granted. Just how many of today’s best games do we owe to sex, anyway?”
REGINA LYNN,
Wired.com Sex Drive columnist and author of “The Sexual Revolution 2.0″

Download PORN & PONG PRESS KIT w/ book summary and hi-res pics

AUTHOR: damon [at] damonbrown [dot] net
REVIEW COPIES/SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS:
jessica [at] feralhouse [dot] com

Publishers Weekly gives "Porn & Pong" thumbs up

The review is in: Publishers Weekly, the main book industry trade publication, gives Porn & Pong a thumbs up:


Porn and Pong: How Grand Theft Auto, Tomb Raider and other Sexy Games Changed Our Culture
Damon Brown. Feral House (Consortium, dist.), $15 paper (160p) ISBN 9781932595369
Brown, a journalist for Playboy and The New York Post, maps the course of sex in video games from the Atari era to the present in this slim, fun read. Asserting that video games fulfill the cultural need for “dark sexual thrills,” Brown’s roving (occasionally rambling) exploration looks at the young medium in context and finds that, even in its infancy, video games were already as influential, potentially dangerous, and worthy of dissection as any other art. The first mainstream porno game, 1982′s “Custer’s Revenge” for the Atari 2600, spurred debate over the non-consensual nature of its crudely depicted virtual sex, culminating in crowds of protesters, lawsuits against the publisher, and the sexual assault of a Native American woman by thugs verbally invoking the game. Despite his graphic description of games many may find abhorrent, Brown comes off as neither a libertarian geek nor a moral custodian, and he keeps his history lively with personalities like Toby Gard, designer of video gaming’s all-time “It Girl,” Lara Croft. The talented programmer’s admission that “maybe subconsciously, [Lara Croft] was my sister” is just one of the quirky insights Brown unearths, revealing the digital artistry and skewed lust that fuel the industry’s ever-expanding reach: in erotic content, artistic merit and culture at large. (Nov.)

Pick up Porn & Pong as the perfect stocking stuffer for your favorite gamer, techie or pop culture lover.

2 Responses to “Publishers Weekly gives "Porn & Pong" thumbs up”

  1. Damon Brown | Freelance Writer :: Publishers Weekly gives “Porn & Pong” thumbs up Says:

    [...] can read the review in its entirety at Porn & Pong HQ or the Publishers Weekly [...]

  2. Damon Brown | Freelance Writer :: Publishers Weekly gives “Porn & Pong” thumbs up Says:

    [...] can read the review in its entirety at Porn & Pong HQ or the Publishers Weekly [...]

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