Neil Mc Kenna argues that our view of Oscar Wilde even after Ellmans magisterial volume is determined by Victorian sentimentality. In his own much more modern version of Wildes story he is not only extremely promiscuous but also a sort of campaigner for sexual freedom. He reveals for example that Wildes relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas was not an idealistic doting on a beautiful boy but that Bosie was the more dominant experienced of the two who used to go out hunting together for young boys. Wildes last days in Paris were not Mc Kenna shows miserable & defeated; Paris was for him an idyllic sensual & intellectual playground free from the narrowness of London.