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____{ T i p p i n g t h e Ve l v e t }
BY SARAH WATERS
RIVERHEAD BOOKS
FICTION
472 PAGES
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July 30, 1999 |
"Some people like their oysters raw," Nancy explains right off the bat, "and for them your job is easiest ... But for those who took their oysters stewed, or fried -- or baked, or scalloped, or put in a pie -- my labours were more delicate." Waters never flinches in describing Nancy's serial encounters with breasts, buttocks, pricks, "broom-handles," "slits," "arse-holes," "mashers," "frigstresses," "renter boys" and (invariably) sopping-wet nether regions. She is particularly clever when writing about Nancy's first encounter with a dildo: It was a kind of harness, made of leather: belt-like, and yet not quite a belt ... For one alarming moment I thought it might be a horse's bridle; then I saw what the straps and buckles supported ... I did not, at that time, know that such things existed and had names. For all I knew, this might be an original, that the lady had had fashioned to a pattern of her own. Perhaps Eve thought the same, when she saw her first apple. This is the lesbian novel we've all been waiting for -- a sexy, funny, sometimes deeply moving romp through the Victorian underworld, saturated with period detail and almost completely free of activist harangue. Almost, but not quite: In fictional terms, Waters can't resist rewarding her out characters and drubbing her more inhibited ones. But she writes fearlessly and joyfully in the picaresque tradition, with a nod to Moll Flanders, Fanny Hill, Candide and "Walter," the anonymous author of that all-time classic of Victorian porn, "My Secret Life." Betrayed by Kitty, tossed from pillar to post, blowing "gents" in back alleys for a pound a pop and abused without mercy by a group of sadistic upper-class "Sapphists" and "toms," Nancy emerges at the end not innocent, certainly, but true to her nature, once she discovers what that nature is -- "a curious mix of magic and necessity, glamour and sweat." The publicity packet sent out with "Tipping the Velvet" contains a short glossary of Victorian sexual terms. No reader who surrenders to Waters' daring vision will need it. Dildos, "spendings" and "knocking-shops" are the same in any age. In a word, delightful.
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