Fanny Hill

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Fanny Hill
The cover of the 1910 version
Original Title: Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure
Written by: John Cleland
Central Theme: Sex in the XVIII century
Synopsis: The first original English prose pornography, and the first pornography to use the form of the novel. (Libertine Literature in England)
First published: 21 November 1748
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Fanny Hill is John Cleland's classic erotic novel, originally published in 1748 under the title Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure.

The book is written as two (very long) letters from one middle-aged rich Englishwoman named Frances "Fanny" Hill to another woman who is identified only as "Madam", where Fanny proceeds to recount her early life with alleged complete honesty. This life was marked by the death of her parents, her times as alternatively a prostitute and a kept woman, and her love story with Charles, a former client and First Love to whom after many adventures she becomes Happily Married. Along these stories we are told very detailed and extensive recounts of numerous sexual escapades, not only Fanny's but also the ones of the people she met during the most scandalous stage of her life.

This novel was (and to a point still is) highly controversial, to say the less - despite being on the conventional morality of the era (that frowned on homosexuality and vice and approved only of heterosexual relationships based in mutual love), its depicted sexual politics were extremely against what was considered the proper conduct for women at the time, and Fanny's Happy Ending marked her a Karma Houdini for the standards of the era. It is considered one of the most prosecuted and banned books in history: it was banned in the United States until 1966.


Tropes used in Fanny Hill include: