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Gelijk oversteken by Roald Dahl
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Gelijk oversteken (1974)

by Roald Dahl, C.A.G. van den Broek

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1,5012712,092 (3.8)32
'The Visitor' and 'Bitch' are extracts from the diaries of the notorious Oswald Hendryks Cornelius, hedonist beyond compare. Uncle Oswald's exploits are as extraordinary as they are scandalous, as these two tales of sex and intrigue confirm in vivid and hilarious detail. The delicious thrill of sexual expectation -- and its sometimes maddening effects -- are explored in 'The Great Switcheroo' and 'The Last Act'; here the power of desire is a double-edged sword, both pleasurable and potentially catastrophic. Lust, triumph, the galling deflation of defeat: Roald Dahl captures them all in these superbly taut black comedies of human weakness and unexpected reversal. Book jacket.… (more)
Member:Dunord
Title:Gelijk oversteken
Authors:Roald Dahl
Other authors:C.A.G. van den Broek
Info:Amsterdam : Meulenhoff; 157 p, 19 cm; http://opc4.kb.nl/DB=1/PPN?PPN=111139430
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:Engeland

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Switch Bitch by Roald Dahl (1974)

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» See also 32 mentions

English (26)  Dutch (2)  All languages (28)
Showing 1-5 of 26 (next | show all)
Yeah, that Roald Dahl.
Weird ( )
  bookonion | Mar 10, 2024 |
I had a conversation with a friend recently who said that the problem with writing adult stories is that it feels like you have to write gratuitous sex scenes into it just for it to classify as an adult story and get the attention that it deserves from that market. Reading this book, however, I have to say that Dahl has found a way around this without making his stories too dirty or too raunchy.
There are only four stories in this collection, four stories that are a bit longer than the other stuff I’ve reviewed by Dahl before (in terms of his short stories) but four stories that have so much to them. The collection is full of sex and adultery, but without it being crass, rude, or even just outright disgusting.
Two of the four stories centre around the same character – Oswald Cornelius, a man of world renown who loves opera, spiders, dressing well, and sex. Oswald loves nothing more than bedding woman after woman, having a personal rule that he never sleeps with the same woman twice and that he never lets a romance last longer than twelve hours (which he believes is pushing it, as even eight hours is already excessive). The first chronological story in the collection, Bitch, centres around Oswald and a business partner of his creating a perfume that is so chock-full of pheromones that any man who smells it will immediately want to have sex with the first woman that he finds. And violent, animalistic sex at that. The second story is claimed to be the last story that is known of Oswald before he passed away, written in his personal diaries. Called The Visitor, this story takes place in the Sinai Dessert, in which Oswald might be the unwilling participant in a plot to bring a wealthy family some good, intellectual company, and is left to decide whether he wants to seduce the lady of the house, or her equally sultry daughter. Both stories end in a wonderful plot twist that leaves you thinking that maybe, just maybe, there’s a lot more to Dahl than meets the eye with this kind of imagination.
A third story in this collection, the story that this collection is named after, is about two next door neighbours who decide to have a bit of fun and sleep with each other’s wives without the wives knowing that they’re sleeping with a different man. Nowadays, this story is incredibly problematic -though the women are willing participants in the act, it is technically rape as they’re not actually sleeping with the person that they thought they’re sleeping with. It’s rape by deception. I don’t condone this kind of behaviour whatsoever, but damn that ending leaves you wondering who really came up with the idea in the first place – the narrator who plotted it all, or his neighbour who seems to have been plotting it for longer.
Finally, the story The Last Act is one of the saddest Dahl tales I’ve ever read. All his other short stories centre around revenge, or mystery, or are just written in a way that the horror or terrible events happening at least have a sense of witty humour to them. This story centres around Anna, who lost her husband in a tragic car accident. The first three-quarters of the story centre around Anna getting over the death of the love of her life and leaving behind the throes of depression. She starts to work again, leave the house, and actually start to feel happiness again. Unfortunately, Anna’s tale does not have the happy ending I so felt she deserves, as Anna’s depression comes back in full force by the end of the story, and you’re left knowing that she didn’t make it out of the ending in one piece.
All in all I give this collection a 4/5, simply because I felt like The Last Act could have been so much better if it was just a little bit more witty or had a happier ending. I love that Dahl isn’t trying too hard to write a story that’s shockingly sexy or provocative, and that he spares the details of the sex altogether, even going so far as to never swear in any of the stories (though stories aimed at adults normally have quite a bit of foul language in them). Indeed, the only curse word I could find in the whole collection was ‘shit’, present in the last one in the collection.
I recommend reading this, though it definitely won’t take you long. Maybe two or three days, but it’ll be worth it for the way that Dahl drags you into a world of adult thinking and interest that we all sometimes forget is what we live in today.
( )
  viiemzee | Feb 20, 2023 |
Man, hard to classify this book--it was entertaining. As always I enjoy Roald Dahl's style of writing, those parts were high quality, however, it's essentially 4 short stories that are akin to dirty jokes.

It's rather racist, sexist and classist, but it's done in such a way that could be considered less so, depending on what the individuals were actually like, although the sexism and objectifying women is irritating either way.

If the stories are thought of as jokes, it's less offensive, overall it's interesting to see what Dahl wrote that wasn't for children. ( )
  Pepperwings | Dec 7, 2021 |
Men being beastly
tricking wives, nursing grudges
everyone gets screwed. ( )
  Eggpants | Jun 25, 2020 |
I enjoyed most of this book. The endings weren't perfect, but the rest was fun, and it's written in an accessible but well-crafted style. If you perceive mysogyny easily and aren't looking to get offended, maybe stay away from these. Otherwise have fun. ( )
  mvayngrib | Mar 22, 2020 |
Showing 1-5 of 26 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (9 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Roald Dahlprimary authorall editionscalculated
Broek, C.A.G. van denTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Verheydt, J.Translatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Not long ago, a large wooden case was deposited at the door of my house by the railway delivery service.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Collection of Four Short  Stories:
1. The Visitor
 2. The Great Switcheroo,
3. The Last Act,
4. Bitch.
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Information from the German Common Knowledge. Edit to localize it to your language.
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Wikipedia in English (2)

'The Visitor' and 'Bitch' are extracts from the diaries of the notorious Oswald Hendryks Cornelius, hedonist beyond compare. Uncle Oswald's exploits are as extraordinary as they are scandalous, as these two tales of sex and intrigue confirm in vivid and hilarious detail. The delicious thrill of sexual expectation -- and its sometimes maddening effects -- are explored in 'The Great Switcheroo' and 'The Last Act'; here the power of desire is a double-edged sword, both pleasurable and potentially catastrophic. Lust, triumph, the galling deflation of defeat: Roald Dahl captures them all in these superbly taut black comedies of human weakness and unexpected reversal. Book jacket.

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Book description
Those four stories are:

The Visitor >> where we are introduced to the diaries left behind by Uncle Oswald to his nephew; the only treasure he could bequeath. We thus learn of Uncle Oswald's adventure in the Sinai desert after his tryst in Cairo. He meets two of the most remarkable women in his long amorous-filled life. We are also exposed to the "method" he utilizes to hypnotize women with words: "The words themselves, innocuous, superficial words, are spoken only by the mouth, whereas the real message, the improper and exciting promise, comes from all the limbs and organs of the body, and is transmitted through the eyes."

The Great Switcheroo >> Two husbands set out to accomplish something that (to their recollection) hasn't been done before: to sleep with the wife of the other without the wife knowing about it. How do they go about it you ask? Better read to find out ;)

The Last Act >> A sad story about a woman who has lost her husband and never quite let go, even with the return of an old flame from her past.

Bitch >> Returning to another entry in Uncle Oswald's diary is the story of his acquaintance with Henry Biotte, one who has devoted his life to the study of olfaction. He meets Uncle Oswald and proposes that with the financial backing of the former, he could then create a perfume which will send anybody into a sexual frenzy. "There was something diabolically splendid about a person who wished to set back the sex habits of civilized man half a million years." The question is will they succeed in inventing the world's most potent aphrodisiac?
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