Harrumph.
I have the publisher hardcover of the ST:TMP novelization. And while I remember some sexual references that were alluded to (or quoted outright) here, I don't recall finding them the least bit shocking.
I read David Gerrold's When HARLIE Was One in my freshman or sophomore year of high school (circa 1977, before TMP). Between the marijuana refereces (legal and commercialized; a leading brand was "Highmasters") and the sexuality (". . . He was a chip of flesh tossed on a splashing sea of laughter and wet eyes and love. A pink sea, with foamy waves and giggling billows. Red nipple-topped pink seas. 'Oh, Annie, Annie, I can't let go of you, I can't—' "), that shocked me. Rather remarkable how the march of technology rendered the original version obsolete, then rendered the "Release 2.0" version even more obsolete than the original.
Part of being an omnivorous reader as a teen is stumbling onto racy parts in books you picked up for other reasons. I remember adolescent Greg raising his eyebrows at the original Bond novels by Ian Fleming, various historical epics like The King Must Die by Mary Renault, full of the "pagan passions of a bygone age," not to mention any number of lurid vampire novels that were sometimes far more explicit than the old Bela Lugosi movies I was accustomed to. As far as I recall, my parents never censored my reading, although I remember my dad talking to me about the novelization of Dr. Phibes Rises Again, which was a bit more "adult" than the actual movie. To his credit, there was no scolding involved; my dad simply saw this as what we now call a "teaching moment" to discuss the use of profanity and sexual content in literature.
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