Book 52: the Decameron
My final RNG offered up 853: Italian Fiction, and I thought why not go for something I'd been meaning to read for a while, which was Giovanni Boccaccio's classic The Decameron. 10 stories for 10 days in the frame narrative that people are escaping the plague in Florence and needed something to pass the time. However, I decided to go for two abridged versions, with not so much overlap between the two.
There's a lot of sex, every single story I heard, save one was about some kind of sex going on. The only one that didn't was some torture porn about the virtues of wifely devotion that if you read the Canterbury Tales in high school you might recognize as the Clerk's Tale, as Chaucer borrowed heavily from the Decameron. Not all of it is sexy sex unfortunately, there's some [TW: SA] trick sex that we would definitely call rape these days. A couple where the guy pretends to be the woman's husband, one where a holy man teaches a woman that sex is punishing the devil, and a few that were probably just plain rape back then too. They try to hand wave it like "Oh, but she enjoyed it" most of the time, but still not cool. [/tw] There's even a gay guy though he's presented as being in the wrong in the text. A lot of star-crossed lovers and some more lucky ones are there too. Not a few cuckolded husbands being outsmarted by their wives.
BEST LINE: Quick, climb in the butt!
SHOULD YOU READ THIS BOOK: Well, it's 100 stories so it's a mixed bag of the good, the bad, and the ugly. It's available for free on Project Gutenberg, though there are better translations these days, too.
ART PROJECT:
I hadn't done any coloring in a while and I found these delightful woodcuts on Project Gutenberg by Werner Klemke. They're available to alter (though I'm not to give the impression my alteration was endorsed by the license holders), - they're not public domain, so I'm linking back to the license as in its terms.











