An account of a group of Athenian women telling late night tales, until the temporal reality shifts and their stories are interrupted by parallel narratives from the 20th Century.
An oddity, even for William Kotzwinkle, and that's saying something as he is odd. Ostensibly, Night Book is a series of erotic tales told by a group of Athenian women in ancient times, coupled with a tangentially related story from modern times. The book covers just about every sexual variation including voyeurism, exhibitionism, prostitution, incest, bestiality ... the list goes on. It's more R-rated than X-rated, but not for children. Rather than erotic, it seemed almost more like a tribute to erotica, if that makes any sense. And although the stories in Night Book are purportedly based on ancient myths, most of them seem to be created whole cloth by the author. Perhaps a scholar of myths could verify their attributions better than I. A fun short read, Night Book seems like something that might be written by the protagonist in a Kotzwinkle novel, and seems like a challenge that the author set for himself to see how it would turn out. Maybe he was trying to write some profitable porn and came up with this instead. A curio, an oddity, an entertainment, a tour de force, and since it's William Kotzwinkle, it's well written. And just out of curiosity, I wonder how many copies of this are extant. [3 Stars]