5 INTERCHANGE
World's most disgusting letters?
9 ANNA BELLE
Photographed by John Mason
14 WIFE OF THE MONTH
Our featured wife
16 IN YOUR DREAMS!
Fantasies for fun
21 A BIT OF POSH
High class crumpet
28 RUBBER ROSIE
Our randiest writer
33 GAYNOR
Photographed by John Mason
40 HOT LIPS AND SEX TIPS
The kissing game
44 THE F-WORD
Photographed by Eric Coyote
55 YOU DID IT WHERE?
Getting it out and about
57 REBECCA
Photographed by Eric Coyote
66 DEAD FUNNY!
Gone but not forgotten
80 AMELIA
Photographed by John Mason
87 TOPLESS REVIEWS
Music, movies and more
91 I CONFESS
Lady readers write
97 VANESSA
Photographed by John Mason
109 READERS' WIVES STRIPTEASE
Angie of Coventry
115 READERS' WIVES
The nation's favourites
Features in This Issue
Covergirl Virginia Photographed by Peter Towelman
Back to basics
Basically-sexy letters
Superb girls and staggering wives
About Fiesta
Fiesta magazine is a British soft-core pornographic magazine, published by Galaxy Publications. It is a sister publication of Knave.
Launched in 1966, Fiesta quickly became Britain’s top selling adult magazine. Dubbed ‘the magazine for men which women love to read,’ the monthly magazine’s readers were responsible, in the early 1970’s, for creating a phenomenon which has been adopted in magazines worldwide: Readers’ Wives. This bright and gaudy glamour magazine has generally featured girl-next-door type models and has an earthy humour which has been compared to that of a British seaside postcard.
Central to this theme, is the monthly 'Readers' Wives Striptease' section, which shows a set of photos of a supposed wife or girlfriend of a reader being photographed by Fiesta undressing (often, but not always out of everyday clothing) to full nudity.
As well as its Readers’ Wives and photographic girl sets, Fiesta is built around a core of readers’ letters from men and women. The mix is spiced by male-interest features, cartoons and reviews, sexy puzzles and a regular erotic horoscope, together with Firkin, a two-page underground-style strip drawn by Hunt Emerson and written by Tym Manley.