cleolinda: (black ribbon)
[personal profile] cleolinda
You guys? I thought George Lippard's The Quaker City, etc., was the pinnacle of awesome trashy 19th-century lit, with its Tarantino-esque brain-splatterings and constantly heaving bosoms. I was so, so wrong. George Thompson's Venus in Boston (and apparently you have to be named "George" to write antebellum porn) is spectacular. We start off with the blind basketweaver grandfather blah blah innocent granddaughter/fruitseller Fanny Aubrey blee blee "You do insult me, sir! How dare you hold me captive in a sumptuously decorated apartment and... okay, the silk gown was pretty sweet, but really, having the scary gnarled non-white housekeeper beat me with an old rope and then fix my hair in a becoming fashion was just too much!" blah. And then: it gets awesome. I'm still not sure how this decrepit old Corporal Grimsby decided to get involved in saving Fanny's... well, fanny, but he sneaks into a thieves' den and listens to the recitations of one Jew Mike (!), who recounts how he was once a butler in Ye Olde Englande, and the lady of the house was having "a torrid affair" with a captain of the dragoons (and can I just say that I don't exactly know what a dragoon is, but I really suspect that I want one?), and the master's snippy French valet was like "Oh no you DI'IN'T!" and was going to te-eeeeell!, so Lady Hawley asked Jew Mike (!) to "silence" the guy and Jew Mike (!) is all like, "Bom chicka...?" and she's like, "... Gah, whatever, fine," so he kills le valet in le wine cellar, and he goes back up to Lady Hawley's room to collect his reward, and she's like, "You have GOT to be kidding," and Captain Hotness is all like, "HA HA!," so Jew Mike (!) is all like, "Look, you wanna play this way? That's fine. Absolutely fine." So he just quietly goes off and stuffs the valet's body in the lovers' favorite wine cask. I mean, sure, he has to decapitate le tattletale before he can stuff all of him in there, but hey, that just adds to the bouquet, right? So he lets them drink this wine for like, two weeks solid while Lord Hawley's out of town and they're getting it on all over the house, and P.S., they think the wine has just aged awesomely, with this "excellent, fruity flavor!," until finally they're just too snotty to poor Jew Mike (!), and he's like, "Yeah, you know why the wine's so great? COME OVER HERE AND TAKE A LOOK." And there's more to it, with some blackmail and a duel and Lord Hawley turning out to be the crack shot, and a dumped Lady Hawley prostituting herself all over London but only to the finest nobles and when she runs out of nobles she decides to starve and/or freeze to death rather than sleep with the hoi polloi, which leads her her running into ex-butler Jew Mike (!) at his new pub, and he takes her in and reveals himself and is totally going to make good on that "reward" but she stabs herself to death first rather than sex up a butler, as one does, but really, that whole chapter's just downhill from the cask of Essence de Valet, as JM! so eloquently puts it himself.

And I'm sitting here going, ain't no way it's gonna get any better than that. Ain't no way. I was so, so wrong.

The guy who had Fanny's fanny locked up in that swank apartment is this really old skeezy guy named Timothy Tickels. Yeah, I know. Take a minute and recover from that one. So Tickels meets this younger skeeze, the Chevalier Duvall (I mean, no, we're not supposed to know he's a skeeze yet, but Thompson's making it really damn obvious what with the descriptions of how sophisticated and ageless and smoove he is), and the Chevalier's like, "You've got to meet my sister, the Duchess Duvall." Now, let's think about this a moment. How, in a world where titles are passed down to sons right over the daughters' heads, does the unmarried sister have a higher title than the brother? So I'm calling bullshit immediately on this one. I haven't gotten further than chapter four, but I will bet you cash money that the Duchess Duvall turns out to be neither 1) a duchess nor 2) French nor 3) related to Robert Duvall or 4) even Clea Duvall, for that matter. So the Chevalier takes Tickels to the outwardly modest but sumptuously furnished Duvall house (and sidenote here: the most pornographic element in 19th-century lit, I have discovered, is the author drooling over plush interior decoration), where there's the obligatory classical statuary and foot-thick Turkish carpets and artfully arranged flowers and beautiful babe draped evah-so-gracefully over a divaaaaaaaan. The Duchess is this babe. Also, she is topless. (That's a new one in the bag of tricks as far as I'm concerned. Well played, sir!) The Chevalier, without so much as batting a lash, is all like, "I've got stuff to do. Have fun!" And so he jets. And Tickels is still in the doorway drooling on himself. So the conversation, once he has sufficiently fumbled over to the divaaaaaaaan, goes a little like this: "You may kiss my hand, and kiss my cheek, and kiss my lips, and HOW DARE YOU MAKE SUCH ADVANCES UPON MY VIRTUE, YOU CALLOUS HEEL! No! No! It's all right, come back! Sometimes I am just too overcome with womanly passions to contain myself. Goodness me! My self appears to be topless! I had no idea!" So she coyly covers herself up, right? NOT EVEN! "If you continue to look at me thus"--if! IF!--"I will have to cover myself with a shawl!" Meaning that he "averts" his eyes and... she's totally still out there! And then there's this way creepy monologue where Tickels decides to strategize and he's all like, "Well, since I am old enough to be your father, and you've just told me the heartwrenching story of how your father the Duke killed your mother and her lover and then himself when you were young, why don't we pretend that I'm your father! That's right! I can kiss you and hug you if I'm your father, because that's a father's right!" And at this point, Thompson actually has to asterisk this whole thing and say in a footnote, "This passage is actually supposed to clue you in to how freaknasty Tickels is, and how the Duchess is actually manipulating him the whole time." Here's the thing, though: Thompson could have achieved this just as easily by saying, "...because that's a father's right!" and then shown the Duchess, like, snuggling up to Tickels with a sly grin on her face or something. But he doesn't show anything--it's just an uninterrupted, unqualified soliloquy. You know what this means, right? You get to have your incest jollies and feel morally superior, which: EW. And then? AND THEN! The Chevalier busts in with a pistol, all "HOW DARE YOU PREY UPON MY HOSPITALITY AND MY TOPLESS SISTER! TO THE DEATH, SIR!" And Tickels is all like, "But--but--I'm useless, man! I've never even held a gun before! But--I have money! How much do you want? A hundred?" And the Chevalier is like, "I CANNOT BELIEVE YOU WOULD THINK THAT MONEY COULD BUY BACK MY SISTER'S TOPLESS VIRTUE!" "Five hundred?" "SIR, YOUR IMPUDENCE DISGUSTS ME!" "A thousand?" "Well, you know, we do need to reupholster the carriage... Five thousand." "WHAT?" And so on. Until Tickels is parted with his money. And that's where I stopped, because I was like, "It is necessary that I tell the good people on LJ about this. Like, yesterday."

P.S. I have reason to suspect that they're totally not brother and sister at all. Unless brothers in 1840 were accustomed to commenting on the quality of their sisters' bosoms.

P.P.S. We are promised subterranean "Chambers of [Totally Involuntary, But Extremely Well-Decorated] Love" in the basement of a brothel. I can't frickin' wait for that hilarity.

P.P.P.S. DUDE! I didn't even tell you the best part! If you click on the link, the picture on the cover? Is an illustration of the topless "seduction" scene. It's reprinted in full inside the book, and, indeed, the Duchess is quite without top. Only she's as unnippled as a Barbie doll. It's a little unsettling, y'all.





 

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Date: 2005-09-11 09:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scornedsaint.livejournal.com
Chica, you need to start recapping books. 'Cause that was awesome.

And thank you so much for giving me another book to go out and immediately buy leaving me no time to read all that other stuff that I have to read. I hate you (but I totally don't. Yay for antebellum porn!)

Date: 2005-09-11 10:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jedilora.livejournal.com
I feel enriched! Enriched I tell you!

Date: 2005-09-11 10:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emisi.livejournal.com
A dragoon is like evil Captain Taggert (think that's his name) in The Patriot. Crack troops, I believe they were.

Dragoon: (n) A member of a European military unit trained and armed to fight mounted or on foot

I think they may have had a bad reputation though, because dictionary.com also lists this:
tr.v. dra·gooned, dra·goon·ing, dra·goons

1. To subjugate or persecute by the imposition of troops.
2. To compel by violent measures or threats; coerce.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emisi.livejournal.com
Oh, and now I must read this book, because that summary was AWESOME and I live for overly dramatic Victorian porn.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evilbearhunter.livejournal.com
Oh my god. I love both you and this book.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
See how great literature embiggens your mind?

Date: 2005-09-11 10:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tifaria.livejournal.com
Well, with a recap/summary like that, how can I not want to go read this? Sounds like a nice break from all the pretentious art history crap I've been reading this semester anyway.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
The picture on the cover? Is an illustration of the topless scene in question. It's reprinted in full in the book itself. DUDE.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ambiguousreason.livejournal.com
This is so, so awesome. I may have to actually read this book.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redmapletree.livejournal.com
You are a goddess among writers. :D

Date: 2005-09-11 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
I'm saying!!

Date: 2005-09-11 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
It's the perfect follow-up to Melville, too.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] astael.livejournal.com
...I think I've been wasting my time on all the wrong books.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:12 pm (UTC)
kokopellinelli: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kokopellinelli
Is 'embiggens' a real word? I'm totally gonna use it in idle conversation either way, but I'm just curious.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mekania.livejournal.com
That made my afternoon. I need to read this book now...after I finish all the books on my "I'm unable to control myself when I walk into a bookstore" shelf of unread literature. And The Once and Future King for my Legend of King Arthur class.

But gaah, I must. Read. This. Book.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
It's not even very long! The copy I have--which is the only edition not on, like, microfilm, I think--has three different works by Thompson, so it's not like you can't knock it out in one particularly hilarious day. : )

Date: 2005-09-11 10:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mekania.livejournal.com
Awesome! I was planning on going to Borders later today anyway! The library version of the Once and Future King smells and it's hard to snuggle up in bed with a smelly book. I will remember to grab Venus in Boston as well!

Date: 2005-09-11 10:26 pm (UTC)
leucocrystal: (sinfest // we're laughing with you)
From: [personal profile] leucocrystal
EEE hee hee!

Only you can recap movies, shows AND books! You are the master of your domain. Or, you know, whatever you wanna call it

Love! ♥

Date: 2005-09-11 10:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
It's a joke from the Simpsons. I think someone uses "embiggens" and someone else says something about it, leading to the immortal line, "That's a perfectly cromulent word!"

Date: 2005-09-11 10:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] princessstarr.livejournal.com
And just when I thought "Reasons That Induced Dr. S..." by Lady Montagu was the epitome of great dirty literature.

MUST FIND.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] handlet.livejournal.com
Hee! This entry has totally brightened my afternoon. I may have to get this book. What's one more addition to my towering "books to read" stack?

So, is poor Fanny still locked away in the posh apartment while Tickels (sneeerk!) is off seducing the "Duchess"?

Date: 2005-09-11 10:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cleolinda.livejournal.com
Nah, that strange Corporal Grimsby person charged in and saved her, and Tickels is still smarting from that when he goes to the Duvalls'. He's just walking out right now with plans of imprisoning Fanny in the Chamber of Love in his head. "Anything for love!"

Yeah, dude? I don't think that's "love" you're talking about there.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] particle-person.livejournal.com
It's originally from the Latin embigere, "to supersize." It came to English via Spanish when Christopher Columbus sighted a very large land mass and exclaimed, "Uno país, embigé!" meaning, "One country, supersized!" He was overheard by an English stowaway, who made it back to England and popularized it in his book about the journey, "How I Wanted to Go to India but Picked A Boat That Went the Wrong Direction."

Date: 2005-09-11 10:51 pm (UTC)
kokopellinelli: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kokopellinelli
Wow. I learned something new about history today...Mother would be so proud.

Date: 2005-09-11 10:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] foresthouse.livejournal.com
I think the wine-cask and the toplessness are what made me go "huh?" the most.

I have got to get this book, if just for the sheer nuttiness...
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