A series of surreal drawings, in which the couple plunge naked off a giant obelisk and swing on trapezes holding sharp weapons, is meant to portray how sex feels, rather than how it looks.
Readers of the Le Monde site have been divided in their response. Some have dismissed the first chapter published this week as "over-intellectualised" or "badly drawn". Others say they they cannot wait for the next three chapters.
In France, the comic book, or bande dessinee, is regarded as an art form. Florent Ruppert and Jerome Mulot, the authors of La technique du perinee (the perineum technique) already have a reputation for pushing the genre beyond its traditional boundaries. Readers were encouraged to slash their previous book to pieces.
Their new book, serialised in Le Monde, begins with a surreal sex sequence. After several pages, the reader discovers that the couple are not plunging from an obelisk into a pool of water. They are sitting in their respective homes in front of their laptop computers and masturbating.
As the story progresses, the young man asks to meet the young woman in person. She refuses, saying, perhaps jokingly, that she fears that he will cut her into pieces. Eventually - like a coy damsel in a medieval tale - she sets him a mission or task.
If he manages to have remote sex with her on Skype for four months without ejaculating, she will have dinner with him. The young man therefore attempts to learn the perineum technique of the book's title - a method of male muscular control allegedly permitting limitless sexual pleasure.
Ruppert, one of the authors, said: "It's an entirely traditional story in its structure. We wanted to talk about what was changing about the way we live, notably because of the internet, by means of a story about sexuality.
"We didn't want to show sex scenes because it would have looked like porn. So we transfigured the sexual acts. We wanted to talk about sexuality without distracting the reader, without giving them the desire to have sex themselves."
The first chapter of the book rocketed to the second-most read spot on Le Monde's site (the most read news site in France, especially popular with the political and intellectual classes).
Readers' comments were mixed. "It's very pretentious," said one. Another said the art-work was "simplistic" and that the dialogues "lacked finesse". But one described this as "just cheap snobbery" and the book as extraordinary, and another said: "I love it."
- Independent