Good sex, bad sex
The Express | 3 Jan 1997
Caroline Phillips reveals the best romantic encounters she could possibly imagine and, when reality intervened, a few of the worst.
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“Caroline Phillips is a tenacious and skilful writer with a flair for high quality interviewing and a knack for making things work.”
Caroline Phillips reveals the best romantic encounters she could possibly imagine and, when reality intervened, a few of the worst.
She has a pierced nipple, had her first kiss at 15 and fantasises about sex in the rain. Caroline Phillips finds out if Sarah Cawood, the new presenter of Channel 4’s late-night youth programme, is as outrageous as she appears.
A survey released last week by motor manufacturer Toyota found that the car has overtaken the breakfast table as a principal family meeting place. The evidence from the survey will be used in designing its Picnic “family fun” car.
Our family has known this for years. A long time ago, we started having family Christmases in the car. We don’t have to put up many decorations because we can, if the mood takes us, park beneath the festoons of light adorning Regent Street.
And we do our bit for the environment – the tree part of it, at least – because we speed to Trafalgar Square to admire the 65ft Norwegian Christmas tree rather than splashing out on our own somewhat smaller baubled conifer.
I was about to witness the terrible beauty of this brutal sport, this distillation of basic urban survival instinct. I swallowed hard and repeated to myself the boxer’s mantra.
Sandy Woodward, naval hero of the Falklands, tells Caroline Phillips why he deserted his wife after 32 years.
You’ve endured the morning sickness, the painful birth. And you’ve suffered the gruelling labour of finding a nanny. Finally you have your first chance to go out alone, with your husband.
Prince Charles’s confidant and spiritual guru Sir Laurens van der Post, tells Caroline Phillips abot passion, plants and his extraordinary past.
If the thought of exercise makes you weak, meet the personal trainer who hypnotises clients into shape. Caroline Phillips falls under his spell.
Freya North, 28, has just won the literary lottery. Publishers fought to buy her first novel, Sally, a feisty romp that helped her scoop £200,000 in a three-book deal.
Professor Phillip Bennett has been vilified over the past week as a national hate figure. Most of the time he has been holed-up in his West London house behind closed curtains with his girlfriend Lisa and his two cats.
He is the father of a little boy, the son of a convicted terrorist and the man trying to save Mandy Allwood’s eight unborn babies. He is a person who hates performing abortions so much that he wants to vomit every time he does one. He is also the doctor who helped a woman have a baby after 13 miscarriages.
This is a time of national mourning. Of women wearing black Armani armbands. Of not a dry high cheekbone in the country. This is the era of the distressed female. The last male remaining on the shopping list of the world’s most desirable men has just become unavailable.
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