Citations:Sexville

Noun: "(slang) a notional town representing sexual activity, sexual thoughts, etc."

 * 1957, Frederick Kohner, Gidget, Berkley (2001), ISBN 9780425179628, page 3:
 * It's probably a lousy story and can't hold up a candle to those French novels from Sexville, but it has one advantage: it's a true story on my word of honor.
 * 1967, Charles Nuetzel, Hollywood Nymph, Wildside Press (2007), ISBN 9780809501373, page 46:
 * "Hell we are!" She laughed, almost happily. "Where to?"
 * "A bar—a hotel room—a bed. Drunksville—and 'Sexville."
 * 2006, Andrea Stephen, Boyland: A B. A. B. E. 's Guide to Understanding Guys, Fleming H. Revell (2006), ISBN 9780800759520, page 57:
 * Let him watch an hour of TV, and he'll see tons of visual images that can take his brain to Sexville.
 * 2009, Andy Cattrall, The Weatherman Has Stolen the News, Chipmunkapublishing (2009), ISBN 9781847479747, page 72:
 * None of us were cool, none of us were lapping the cream of sexville – like, '3 days of beer an' birds,' as one feisty lad exhorted to his crew above my stooped weeding shadow one morning.
 * 2010, Richard Herring, How Not to Grow Up: A Coming of Age Memoir, Sort of, Ebury (2010), ISBN 9781407031439, page 60:
 * It seemed like everyone else was on the train to Sexville, while I was locked in the toilets in the station.
 * 2010, Paul Murray, Skippy Dies, Hamish Hamilton (2010), ISBN 9780141943893, unnumbered page:
 * 'A haiku like this is the express train to Sexville.'
 * 2010, Kimberly Raye, The Braddock Boys: Brent, Harlequin (2010), ISBN 9781426860010, page 41:
 * No matter how much she suddenly wanted to take the nearest Exit to Sexville.