Sara Pascoe (2) (1981–)
Author of Animal: The Autobiography of a Female Body
For other authors named Sara Pascoe, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Comedian Sara Pascoe explores the complex connections between sex, power and money. This book is a thoughtful and entertaining journey through anatomy and arousal, dating and sex work, animals and technology as Pascoe makes our most baffling human behaviours less mysterious.
Works by Sara Pascoe
Associated Works
Am I Having Fun Now?: Anxiety, Applause and Life's Big Questions, Answered (2025) — Contributor — 9 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1981-05-22
- Gender
- female
- Education
- University of Sussex
- Occupations
- comedian
writer
actor - Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Dagenham, Essex, England, UK
- Places of residence
- London, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
I bought this to read before seeing Pascoe on tour, neither book nor talk disappointed.
Pascoe takes us on a journey of a female body with a mix of facts, observations and autobiographical details. I enjoyed the style, while there are many laugh out loud moments, Pascoe does not pull her punches when talking about tough issues women face. I connected even more with the book as Pascoe is the same age as me, so I could relate to many of the references. Pascoe covered a lot of the issues that my show more friends and I discuss a lot, from abortion to having children, from endemic sexism and our growing confidence in calling people out on it.
Recommended. show less
Pascoe takes us on a journey of a female body with a mix of facts, observations and autobiographical details. I enjoyed the style, while there are many laugh out loud moments, Pascoe does not pull her punches when talking about tough issues women face. I connected even more with the book as Pascoe is the same age as me, so I could relate to many of the references. Pascoe covered a lot of the issues that my show more friends and I discuss a lot, from abortion to having children, from endemic sexism and our growing confidence in calling people out on it.
Recommended. show less
Here's a reality check for anyone in any vague kind of doubt about the three things in the title.
Both illuminating and funny, it will make your head spin in its directness and delivery.
She is an Essex girl, so any lip and you'll get a slap for your trouble.
Honest, in your face and between your ears
Both illuminating and funny, it will make your head spin in its directness and delivery.
She is an Essex girl, so any lip and you'll get a slap for your trouble.
Honest, in your face and between your ears
Sara Pascoe’s follow-up to Animal discusses the intersection of sex, power, and money. She examines how humans have evolved as sexual beings and how these evolutionary traits clash with current culture. She reviews the literature on porn and its effect on the practitioners and the users. She studies popular culture and its depictions of sexual relationships, and she draws on her own perspective and examines it critically.
Overall, I thought this was very well done, although there was a bit show more too much strikethrough humour for my liking, and maybe a few too many footnotes. That said, the one that went on a digression about how it would be handled in the audiobook was amusing. I might have to get the audiobook to see how that turns out.
Of Pascoe’s two books, I likely prefer Animal, but that is probably mostly down to my own discomfort with reading about porn. I definitely read this on the strength of its author rather than the subject matter. But I am glad to have challenged myself by reading this. show less
Overall, I thought this was very well done, although there was a bit show more too much strikethrough humour for my liking, and maybe a few too many footnotes. That said, the one that went on a digression about how it would be handled in the audiobook was amusing. I might have to get the audiobook to see how that turns out.
Of Pascoe’s two books, I likely prefer Animal, but that is probably mostly down to my own discomfort with reading about porn. I definitely read this on the strength of its author rather than the subject matter. But I am glad to have challenged myself by reading this. show less
I greatly enjoyed this book. Pascoe combines factual information with stories from her own life to discuss the themes of Love, Body and Consent. It is often very funny, sometimes surprising in a "Whew, good thing I'm not reading this on the bus" kind of way, and quick to read. I also liked that she included further reading at the end and a list of organizations one can support if one wishes to help with the various social issues discussed in the book.
Lists
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 363
- Popularity
- #66,172
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 31

















