Nine and a Half Weeks (book)

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Nine and a Half Weeks: A Memoir of a Love Affair
First edition cover (1978)
AuthorIngeborg Day
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectMemoir
GenreNonfiction
PublisherWarner
Publication date
1978
Media typePrint, e-book, audiobook
Pages131 pp.
ISBN978-0751510676

Nine and a Half Weeks: A Memoir of a Love Affair is a 1978 memoir by Ingeborg Day, first published under the pen name Elizabeth McNeill.[1] It details the brief, sexually violent relationship between an art gallery owner and a Wall Street broker – based on Day's own experiences. The memoir was famously adapted into the 1986 erotic drama 9½ Weeks, starring Kim Basinger and Mickey Rourke.[2]

Synopsis[edit]

The memoir is set in New York City. An art gallery owner enters a nine-week affair with a brutal, brutish, sadomasochistic[neutrality is disputed] Wall Street broker who regularly sexually abuses her in his apartment for amusement and pleasure. Unable to say no and sinking into complicity, the woman finds herself enjoying the beginning of the affair. Eventually, the relationship culminates in criminality, depravity and violence[neutrality is disputed] when he convinces her to rob a man at knifepoint in an elevator and forces her into having sex with someone else while he watches.

The woman is forced to make a choice between her life and sanity or a mentally impoverished man incapable of feeling love,[editorializing] but who has manipulated her to love him. He often leaves her tied up, in immense pain, in his opulent apartment for hours at a time.

The memoir ends after her nervous breakdown when he leaves her at a mental hospital. After undergoing therapy that lasts for months, she never sees him again.

Reception and legacy[edit]

The memoir caused a scandal when it was published.

In a 2012 New Yorker article, Sarah Weinman writes "Nine and a Half Weeks is a potent antidote to what passes for erotica today. Instead of over-the-top fictional fantasy, McNeill's book, presented as memoir, is charged as much by explicitness as it is by absence. The reader is only privy to her perspective, and even then, it's occluded by the use of a pseudonym".[3]

While writing the book, Day conceived of it as an "erotic epic poem"[4] and it holds a unique place in erotic literature as it is not an exploration of fantasy, but follows the form of an epic by offering a lengthy, narrative recounting of the sexual deeds and adventures of a woman.

References[edit]

  1. ^ O'Hara, Helen (2 February 2017). "The original Fifty Shades: The painful story behind 9 ½ Weeks". The Daily Telegraph.
  2. ^ Falke, Sandra (17 September 2020). "Literary Escapades. Elizabeth McNeill: ‚Nine and a Half Weeks: A Memoir of a Love Affair'". Literarische Abenteuer (in German). Retrieved 11 March 2024.
  3. ^ Weinman, Sarah (November 30, 2012). "Who was the real woman behind "Nine and a Half Weeks"?". The New Yorker.
  4. ^ "Who Was the Real Woman Behind "Nine and a Half Weeks"?". The New Yorker. 2012-11-30. Retrieved 2022-09-16.