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"Since 1962 when this novel 1st appeared in the USA, it's been a Rorschach test. An early review of it appeared prominently in the NY Times Book Review, shortly after which the paper refused to run advertisements for the book. Time Magazine gave it a rave while Newsweek was silent, then made up for that silence by using the word genius when they reviewed my 2nd novel. Some prominent black people denounced it, as did right-wing white people with more enthusiasm, but Malcolm X & Ertha Kit [Eartha (Mae Keith.) Kitt, American singer, actress, dancer, comedian, activist, author, 1927-2008], I was told, both loved the novel, as did conservative guru William F. Buckley, Jr., in print.
Thru the Sixties & into the Seventies, it was considered radical & racy, yet quite a few universities listed it in various courses, from comparative religions (Yale) to contemporary literature & sociology. During the Eighties, it almost disappeared from the books in print list, but trade paper editions by Grove Press sold quietly from the late Eighties through the Nineties.
Nowadays, I teach a novel writing workshop by correspondence course, which means I work with a great variety of wannabe novelists from all economic classes & ethnicity. Some buy this novel & read it, & let me know what they think of it. Generally, they do not laugh till they ache, as readers reported doing back in the Sixties. Nineties readers are more inclined to read it as I originally intended it to be read: as a quick, satirical story about a tragic fact of American life. Anyone who happens upon this & also reads the novel is welcome to email me his/her response: gocycles@aol.com."--Robert Gover, 2/1999
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Subjects
one hundred dollar misunderstanding, Robert Gover, 20th century, Fiction, American, African Americans, Literature, Blacks Business college, Students, Cross-cultural, Erotica, Ethnicity, Gender, Studies, Novel, Hardcover, Grove Press, Paperback, Ballantine Books, Humor Literature, Money, 14 year old, Prostitute, Prostitution, Race, Race Relations, Satire, Sex, Sexually, Explicit, Slavery, Teenagers, White, Privilege, Prostitutes, College students, Teenage prostitution, African American teenage girlsTimes
1960sShowing 5 featured editions. View all 5 editions?
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One Hundred Dollar Misunderstanding: Author Corrected Text
Jan 02, 2010, Legacy Classic
paperback
1933435348 9781933435343
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one hundred dollar misunderstanding: ''What a find! I've been recommending it to everyone. This book should create a sensation.'' Henry Miller
December 1963, Ballantine Books, Inc., a div. of Pocket Books Inc.
Paperback
in English
- Ballantine Books 2nd Printing ed.
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One hundred dollar misunderstanding: a novel.
1961, The Grove Press
Hardcover and paperback
in English
097269062X 9780972690621
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Printed in Canada / 1st & 2nd printing, both in December 1963 / Other sys. no.: (OCoLC)284650
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Work Description
College sophomore J.C. Holland, fortified by his father's simplistic traditionalism, enters a house of ill-repute to meet Kitty, a 14-year-old prostitute. Sort of ashamed to be there, but feeling the need for the kind of educational complement such a place can provide, young J.C. flashes a gift from his aunt, a hundred dollar bill, to Kitty, who's just sure that's only the first dividend of her "investment". Misunderstanding from them both abounds, along with a funny and insightful tour of the hypocrisy underpinning modern morality.
A college sophomore spends a weekend with a pretty 14-year-old black prostitute under the manly misapprehension that she has invited him because she finds him irresistible. Outraged when her guest resists payment, Kitten steals her rightful $100 fee, and the hi-jinks begins.
Published 45 years ago, this book deals mainly with issues of sexuality as it relates to class and race, privilege and poverty in the southern United States. Jim is a white college sophomore in a Southern college on a Friday night with a hundred dollars in his pocket. Kitten is a 14-year old African-American prostitute. Their paths cross as Jim visits a "Negro house of ill repute."
The book proceeds with Jim and Kitten narrating alternate chapters. Each sees the other as an answer to their needs and their encounter builds into a weekend of misunderstandings as their different backgrounds and expectations keep them from ever having meaningful communication. Yet, despite the insurmountable cultural chasm that separates them, their determination eventually makes small inroads possible.
This book made history at the time because of the frank discussion of sexuality and racial differences. Today, the terminology seems remarkably tame, even quaint. Yet the issues raised about sexual morality and class privilege are as relevant as ever.
Gore Vidal said: "There is always a division between what a society does and what it says it does, and what it feels about what it says it does. But nowhere is this conflict more vividly revealed than in the American middle class's attitude toward sex, that continuing pleasure and sometimes duty we have, with the genius of true pioneers, managed to tie in knots. Robert Gover unties no knots but he shows them plain and I hope this book will be read by every adolescent in the country, which is most of the population."
To truly appreciate this story it is important to remember that it is fiction. No 14 year old girls were lured into prostitution in the writing or reading of this book. Robert Gover states it as follows: "The caricatures in this story never were and aren't. If a reader happens to transmute them from typo-alphabetic symbols to figments of his imagination, they will continue to not exist, except as figments of his imagination. This also applies to the events which are this story - they didn't happen and don't.''
Any reader who imagines them happening I asked to please remember he is doing just that - imagining. In other words, the following is a made-up, untrue story."
As an untrue story, this book still does a great job of pointing out, through caricature, some of the seemingly timeless problems of class and privilege in American society, especially as they relate to the sexual behavior of the middle class.
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August 19, 2022 | Edited by MARC Bot | normalize LCCNs |
February 19, 2020 | Edited by ED Power | 2nd ed ent. with updated info. |
February 19, 2020 | Edited by ED Power | Update covers |
February 19, 2020 | Edited by ED Power | Added new cover |
February 19, 2020 | Created by ED Power | Added new book. |