: The story follows a woman named Diane who uses prescription pills to suppress repressed, "pitch-black" memories and "carnal neurosis".
If you are looking for a fictional narrative, there is a titled Promiscuities .
: The "story" follows a group of adolescent girls (including a younger Wolf in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury) as they discover their desires, navigate "forbidden crushes," and experience the often-unspoken dark side of coming-of-age, including sexual violence and abortion. Other Versions
is primarily known as a provocative and deeply personal non-fiction work by Naomi Wolf, titled Promiscuities: The Secret Struggle for Womanhood . It explores the sexual coming-of-age of women born during and after the sexual revolution of the 1960s and 70s. The "Deep Story" of Naomi Wolf's Promiscuities
: Wolf argues that society lacks healthy rites of passage for girls, leaving them to navigate "extraordinary and contradictory" pressures where they must compete with pornography while still facing old stigmas.
The book functions as both a memoir and a cultural exposé. It details the transition from girlhood to womanhood for a generation that faced a new landscape of explicit adult imagery and contradictory sexual pressures.