


No, I would have her save Jennifer North, the ravishing showgirl, who had to abort her baby after finding out it carried her child-minded groom’s terminal condition and who finally found love with a senator who-gasp!-thought she looked pretty without makeup and in pigtails. Not the pig-biting mad Neely O’Hara, or the evil schemer Anne Welles, both of whom are on track to OD on their dolls as the curtain falls. Of course, she did, which is what gives the book its vast depths, but I would like to drag her through the next century, to the here and now, so she could let at least one of her protagonists o the hook. There is no fixing a perfect book, but I wish-standing, in my mind, on the author’s “wishing hill” in Central Park-that the writer did not have to waste her considerable powers on urgent political matters. When VOD was released, the mediocre writer Gloria Steinem wrote a typically snotty assessment of this highly commercial novel, in the process missing entirely the novel’s deep literary tropes ( Troilus and Cressida being one of many) and its scarier-than- Valerie-Solanas messaging. Further, Susann, herself an aging actress, plainly and correctly observes the correlation between women’s dwindling looks and their business opportunities. Perhaps one of the most dismal pop books ever written, it insists throughout that women may not have a career and love: all three broads try and are cruelly thwarted.

Importantly, these girls are not “dolls.” Dolls are the various pills or goofballs the starlets take to wake, sleep, and survive: these poupées clearly signify the pupation of women stuck in a state of becoming, never being.īy no means liked by second-wave feminists, the now-fifty-year-old camp classic, which has spawned chic merch, makeup, and both silver and ceramic pillboxes, is in truth a victim of the 1960s feminist imperative.įor all of its sexy dish and pre-Divine theatrics, the novel is no laughing matter. Not in the arms of a man who is severely mentally challenged, a gay man, and an English cad, the three suitors Susann selected for her heroines.
