5 DELIA
Photographed by Notion Glamour Studios
13 READERS' WIVES
... with their bits out
19 INTERCHANGE
Male mail
25 MANDY
Photographed by Notion Glamour Studios
31 THINGS THAT GO HUMP IN THE NIGHT
Spectral sex
37 DANA
Photographed by Flamingo
49 RONNIE
Photographed by Huey Louis
55 GIMMIE MORE
What Kate did naked
61 LUCY
Photographed by James Freeman
72 NICCI
Photographed by Albert Hall
79 HAVE IT YOUR OWN WAY
Couples confess
87 TOPLESS REVIEWS
Books, yids and albums to buy
93 TREASURE
Photographed by Hank Londoner
99 I CONFESS
Female mail
105 JENNIFER
Photographed by John Graham
117 READERS' WIVES COMPETITION 1999: 3RD PRIZE
Photographed by James Freeman
123 READERS' WIVES
Second batch of snatch
Features in This Issue
Covergirl & Centerfold Lucy from Brighton
Our Birds Are Begging For It!
More Real Letters! Extra Readers' Wives!
Things That Go Hump In The Night
Warm, Wet & Waiting For You
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.