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Lifestyle, Clothing Optional & Adult Travel
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Finally, there is a guide for adults who desire the best romantic and adult-only vacation destinations around the world.
This unique travel directory features some of the most out of the ordinary luxurious romantic resorts, tantalizing events for adults,
clothing optional cruises, private villas and secluded inns around the world. Whether your dream vacation starts above the clouds
or below the sea, this guide offers a wide variety of enchanting destinations for people of all lifestyles and budgets. Discover the
perfect destination for the adventurous adult in you!
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Related Articles:
- If the Plane's a' Rockin'...
- Top Five Clothing Optional Travel Destinations
- Leaving The Kids At Home
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Blue Bay Getaway and Spa
Breezes
Couples Resort
Desire Resort and Spa
Grand Lido Resorts
Hedonism Resorts
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Lifestyles Sun Resort
Occidental Allegro
Patos Planet Swingers Club
San Marcus Inn
Viking's Exotic Resort
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City Guides For Adults
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Other Resources
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Gay & Lesbian Travel
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Clothing-optional & Adult Oriented Vacation Planners
These travel agencies specialize in clothing-optional cruise ship & private resort vacations. They offer adult travel
planning to those that have a desire for love, passion, romance and ecstasy while exploring new worlds on vacation.
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by Ian Littlewood
Historically, the sexual motives of travel have rarely been spelled out in travel guides and brochures. Sultry Climates
is an alternative history of tourism, made up of precisely the details that usually go unmentioned. As Ian Littlewood
demonstrates with dazzling elegance and wit, if we want to make sense of the celebrated "Grand Tour" of the nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries, for example, it's as important to take account of travelers' visits to Dresden streetwalkers
and Venetian courtesans as it is to reckon with their visits to the Dresden picture gallery and the Doge's Palace. From Byron
in Greece to Isherwood in Germany, from American expatriates on the Left Bank to Orton in Morocco and right up to the present
day, what emerges from these experiences is a continuing motif of tourism, previously neglected or ignored--"a breathless book,
a Grand Tour in and of itself" (Los Angeles Times).
Travel can mean travail, risk, even danger. Given all that, why have so many people over the course of history taken the trouble
to take themselves out of their familiar surroundings and wander off to distant, unfamiliar places?
Well, the rewards for the adventurous traveler are many, writes literary historian Ian Littlewood, among them the promise of
self-discovery, of education, of broadening one's horizons. But, more elementally, there's another lure: the prospect of landing
in a strange new bed with an exotic partner somewhere far from home. "Travel," Littlewood neatly observes, "tends to undermine
moral absolutes." And so many travelers have found out for themselves: Oliver Goldsmith, for instance, who concluded of Italy,
"sensual bliss is all the nation knows"; James Boswell, who filled his diaries of travels to the continent with "sultanesque
fantasy" and some sultanesque fact; and Lord Byron, who, "having left England in a blaze of scandal ... took full advantage of
the sexual privileges of exile."
Littlewood's learned but engaging study takes a fresh look at the cultural history of journeying from a fly-on-the-bedroom-wall
point of view, and fans of literary travel will find much of interest in his pages.
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