Read an Excerpt fromWantby Gillian Anderson: 'I Have Always Been Intrigued by Sexual Fantasies' (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Actor Gillian Anderson and her new collection ‘Want’.Photo:Andreas Ortner; Abrams Books

gillian anderson want book cover

Andreas Ortner; Abrams Books

Gillian Andersonhas a newbookout and it’s all about what women want.

In February 2023, theSex Educationstarput out a public call for anonymous letters and the result is more than 100 raw, revealingandreal stories from women around the world — including one of Anderson’s own. These personal accounts touch on a range of sexual perspectives and experiences, including consent, multiple partners, gender as well as sexual preference, bodies, locations, audiences, privacy, scenarios and more.

Below, in an exclusive excerpt shared with PEOPLE, read about the book that helped the actor prepped for her role on the hit Netflix series — and how it led toWantcoming into being.

Gillian Anderson book cover for want

I was barely five years old in 1973 when the novelist Nancy Friday’s cult classic,My Secret Garden: Women’s Sexual Fantasies, made its way onto the bookshelves and into the handbags of women in the U.S.My Secret Gardenwas proof that women enjoyed as rich and diverse an erotic inner life as men. Finally, here was a book in which ordinary women, young and old, were talking honestly about arousal, masturbation, sexual dreams and desires. In their minds, nothing was off limits.

So much has changed in our social and sexual relations in the 50 years sinceMy Secret Gardenwas first published. Have women’s deepest internal desires also changed? I am a woman, with a sex life and fantasies of my own, and I was curious to know the ways in which a diverse group of other women’s fantasies were similar to, or different from, mine.

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Wantstarted as an invitation to women across the globe, ‘a call for women to share the sexual fantasies, thoughts and feelings that so many of us hold in our heads but so rarely speak out loud. A chance to gather the voices of women worldwide into a new book of fantasies for a new generation. My publishers set up a portal where the letters could be sent anonymously. And we waited … We had so many questions: Might women find something interesting or erotic in putting pen to paper and sharing their inner thoughts with others? How would people respond? At the close of the submission deadline, the combined letters counted 800,000 words — we had received enough entries to fill at least eight volumes. Clearly, there was a need.

Gillian Anderson in ‘Sex Education’ with Asa Butterfield.Thomas Wood/Netflix

Gillian Anderson as Jean Milburn and Asa Butterfield as Otis Milburn in Sex Education Season 4

Thomas Wood/Netflix

The call for letters unleashed a torrent of frank, candid, heartbreaking, funny and downright raunchy outpourings which highlighted fantasies as rich and varied as the authors themselves. It was obvious that participating was, for the women, a process that felt both liberating and illicit. There were letters from teenage girls yet to have their first sexual encounter; from single women caught in the endless cycle of online hook-ups and one-night stands; exhausted women with young children; married women or those with long-term partners frustrated with the same old, same old; transgender women and people who identify as non-binary; and women in their sixties and seventies, finding that there’s much to shout about in post-menopausal sex.

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As a society, we habitually put women into boxes, limiting and constraining their identities and roles, and yet what these fantasies demonstrate is that no woman has one sole identity. I also found it surprising that a great number of women today continue to keep their fantasies to themselves. Many of those who wrote to me are loud, proud, confident women owning and celebrating their sexual power, but just as many expressed feeling shame and guilt in seeking sexual comfort and satisfaction. There are plenty for whom sexual fantasies can only ever be secret. It was sobering to read the firsthand experience of those living in countries where social norms — or, in some cases, the law — precludes the possibility of anything other than a heterosexual relationship and sex within marriage. But even contributors from so-called liberal societies write of feeling “shame,” “embarrassment” or “guilt,” of their fear or reluctance to talk to a partner about what they truly think about when they are having sex with them or, often, when masturbating alone.

Wantis out Tuesday, Sept. 17, and available for preorder now, wherever books are sold.

source: people.com