A Melon for Ecstasy explained

A Melon for Ecstasy
Author:John Fortune and John Wells
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Comedy
Publisher:Putnam
Pub Date:1971
Media Type:Print (Hardcover)
Pages:187 pp

A Melon for Ecstasy is a 1971 novel written by John Fortune and John Wells.[1] The title is derived from an Arabic and Turkish proverb, "A woman for duty / A boy for pleasure / But a melon for ecstasy."

Plot summary

Written in an epistolary style, consisting of newspaper cuttings, letters, and extensive excerpts from the diary of its protagonist, the novel tells the story of Humphrey Mackevoy, a young man who achieves sexual satisfaction by boring holes in trees and penetrating them with his penis.

Intercut with the story of how his passion leads him into confusion, shame and prison, but eventually into acceptance of, and almost pride in his peculiarity, are a series of comic sub-plots involving the local naturalists' society (are the holes appearing in trees around town really the work of the sabre-toothed dormouse?); a feud between local councillors that leads to mass poisoning; Mackevoy's unwitting involvements in the sexual fantasies of teenager Rose Hopkins; and the increasingly outrageous behaviour of "mummy".

Literary significance and criticism

The novel is a satirical depiction of British sexual mores, newspaper letters to the editor, and public life in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Crews . Harry . 1971-08-08 . A Melon For Ecstasy; By John Fortune and John Wells. 188 pp. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. $5.95. . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-08-24 . 0362-4331.