My book, Sex Cultures, was reviewed in Social Forces. Dustin Kidd from Temple University writes, “What sort of a book is Sex Cultures? While it is constructed very differently from the author’s previous monographs, I cannot rightly say this is not a monograph unto itself. It offers original arguments and analysis, and it is based significantly on fieldwork, even if that fieldwork was primarily the basis for the previous volumes. Much of its argumentation is driven by theoretical and methodological claims, which are worthy of monographs unto themselves. I pose this question because the monograph is the most esteemed book form in the field. So, I want to say that this is indeed a monograph, but I also want to recognize that it is a unique sort of monograph that I would love to see a great deal more. In Sex Cultures, Ghaziani synthesizes a narrative from across his existing works, and then further synthesizes that narrative with the field of sexuality studies. The book essentially lays out an agenda for the field by staking claims about the pivotal contributions of the sociology of sexuality and the possibilities for future analysis.”