Switch Bitch
OCLC 4800308 | |
Switch Bitch (1974) is a book of adult
The book is notable for its introduction of the
Contents and introductions
"The Visitor"
Wealthy gadabout Oswald Hendryks Cornelius is stranded in Cairo when a Syrian businessman picks him up by the side of the road and offers him a room for the night in his desert mansion. While there Oswald meets the man's wife and daughter, both of whom are extremely beautiful. A midnight liaison occurs and Oswald wonders whom it was he spent the night with, when the businessman reveals to him new information that could be fatal.
"The Great Switcheroo"
Two middle-class suburban men at a neighbourhood party devise a ruse whereby each can sleep with the other's wife, without either wife realising the deception. They compare sexual techniques beforehand, and one receives a rude awakening the morning after.
"The Last Act"
After being widowed a woman reconnects with the man she left for her late husband years ago. The man is a gynaecologist, recently separated, and unbeknownst to the woman still harbours a grudge for her breaking off their relationship. He begins to seduce her, and a terrible revenge ensues.
"Bitch"
Oswald Cornelius becomes entangled with a Belgian olfactory expert who claims to have discovered an eighth smell-related nerve that, when stimulated, unlocks certain aspects of human sexual experience. The expert develops a perfume to stimulate the nerve, causing chaos when it is exposed during a high society dinner for an American women's movement that Oswald is attending.
Reception
The stories have been criticised for their cruel and
Despite this negative reception, the stories have also been praised. Alfred Hitchcock, for whose television programme Dahl's story "Man from the South" was adapted, was fond of "The Visitor" and in later life recounted its plot on American talk shows as a dark joke.[4][5]
See also
References
- ^ Roald Dahl (1976). Switch Bitch.
These stories were originally published by Playboy magazine. Published in Great Britain in book form by Michael Joseph 1974. Published in Penguin Books 1976.
- ^ Treglown, Jeremy (9 September 2006). "The height of fancy". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 22 September 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
- ^ Heller, Zoë (20 October 2010). "The Miserabilist". The New Republic.
- ^ The Tomorrow Show (hosted by Tom Snyder). Archived from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 13 July 2022 – via YouTube.
- ISBN 9781623568696.