A thirty-year-old virgin embarks on a quest to find true love in this rediscovered post-modern tragicomedy.
"She was a virgin and her virginity had burrowed in. . . . the idea of sex had such a grip on her that she tried to avoid, totally, thinking about sex."
Sophisticated, highly stylish, and crackling with wit, Cynthia Buchanan's Maiden, originally published in 1971, should today be as celebrated as the fiction of Eve Babitz, Joan Didion, and Sylvia Plath. A glitter-and-blood tragicomedy of the fantasies of romance, persona, and California, it feels startlingly contemporary--an American literary original and a forebear to Helen DeWitt, Nell Zink, and Patricia Lockwood. Maiden's Fortune Dundy is one of literature's most memorable and lovable antiheroines: endlessly charming, painfully deluded, and hell-bent on self-destruction.