This book actually has several Shakespeare references.
The first two are to Shakespeare himself. Frederick Kunz (perhaps not the
author’s real name) writes, “There was a small window near the ceiling with
colorful red polka dot curtains hanging on it, and a desk in the corner with a
dictionary and a book of Shakespeare” (p. 59). Kunz continues: “Mavis picked it
up. ‘Chaucer has more sex than Shakespeare,’ she said, thumbed through it
quickly, and set it down again” (p. 59). That’s followed by a reference to Hamlet: “She pressed her boobies against
his chest hard. ‘There’s the rub,’ she said” (p. 60). Yes, a fairly goofy
reference.
But Kunz is not finished yet. He writes: “Rochelle
blushed. Sneed started singing an aria a minute later. All’s well that ends
well, thought Mavis” (p. 119). And then there is a reference to Macbeth’s great
speech: “And we got a publisher. And that fuckin’ research book, a tale told by
an idiot, me, a personal narration, a true confession, butted by raw fact, that
book, cookies, sold like hotcakes” (p. 179). Macbeth’s speech is one of my
favorite passages in all of Shakespeare (thus, in all of literature), and the
lines referred to here are, “It is a tale/Told by an idiot, full of sound and
fury,/Signifying nothing.”
And if all that isn’t enough, this book also has a
reference to Jacques’ famous speech in As
You Like It. Kunz writes: “I told him all the world was watchin’. I told
him to try harder. I kept beatin’ his meat and suckin’ his cock and still,
nothing. I told him all the world’s a stage. And we were just players. I didn’t
want him to take it too serious, or anything” (p. 180). Yes, “All the world’s a
stage,/And all the men and women merely players.”
While I have your attention, here is a bit from the book
that I found funny. It has nothing to do with Shakespeare, but it’s amusing all
the same. “Carol Lou’s big tits dangled down like apples from a tree. Greg had
visions of aiming his beebee gun at them, but he didn’t have it with him. In
fact, he didn’t even own one. It was just a pleasant fantasy” (p 98). Lines like
that made me laugh.
Little Girl Lust
was published in 1976 by Star Distributors, Ltd.
No comments:
Post a Comment