ADVERTISEMENT

Nancy Friday, author of 'My Secret Garden,' dead at 84

Published - November 07, 2017 09:29 am IST - NEW YORK

“I do think a lot of women are likely to begin fantasizing after reading this book,” Ms. Friday told The New York Times in 1973.

Nancy Friday, a journalist and author whose best-selling My Secret Garden was a landmark compilation of women’s sexual fantasies, has died at age 84.

Literary agent Robert Thixton said Ms. Friday died on Sunday morning in her Manhattan apartment. She was 84 and died of complications from Alzheimer’s.

ADVERTISEMENT

My Secret Garden- Women’s Sexual Fantasies , explicit letters and interviews gathered by Ms, Friday, was published in 1973 and is widely regarded as the first major book to compile women’s sexual fantasies. It was an era of erotic candor, from Dr. David Reuben’s

ADVERTISEMENT

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex(asterisk) (But Were Afraid to Ask) to Erica Jong’s novel

ADVERTISEMENT

Fear of Flying . But Ms. Friday’s book was still shocking, with its graphic detail of everything from rape to bestiality.

ADVERTISEMENT

My Secret Garden was described at the time as a dirty book with the clean parts edited out. It was panned by Ms. Magazine, which declared that “this woman is not a feminist,” but sold millions of copies and made Ms. Friday a celebrity who was interviewed by Tom Snyder, Charlie Rose and Bill Maher, among others.

ADVERTISEMENT

A Pittsburgh native who grew up in Charleston, South Carolina, Ms. Friday was a graduate of Wellesley College and worked as a newspaper and magazine reporter and in public relations in the 1960s and ‘70s before the era’s sexual revolution gave her the idea for a book.

“I do think a lot of women are likely to begin fantasizing after reading this book,” Ms. Friday told The New York Times in 1973. “Or rather, become aware that they have been fantasizing all along, and that these sudden odd ideas or notions they have up to now forgotten, or repressed, are indeed fantasies.”

Ms. Friday was married twice, to author Bill Manville and Time magazine executive Norman Pearlstine. Both marriages ended in divorce.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT