![]() ![]() ![]() Every once in a while, I would show him what I wrote. He wrote that and I began to write other chapters. ![]() Southern suggested that Hoffenberg write a story about the girl, and he came up with the chapter in which Candy meets Dr. After he read Southern's story in manuscript form, Hoffenberg suggested the character should have more adventures. Southern had a different take on the novel's genesis, claiming it was based on a short story he had written about a girl living in New York's Greenwich Village neighborhood, a Good Samaritan-type, who became involved with a hunchback. It's as if you vomit in the gutter and everybody starts saying it's the greatest new art form, so you go back to see it, and, by God, you have to agree. So right away I went back and reread Voltaire to see if he was right. Do you remember what kind of shit people were saying? One guy wrote a review about how Candy was a satire on Candide. But when it got to be a big deal in the States, everybody was taking it seriously. Terry Southern and I wrote Candy for the money. Candy is a 1958 novel written by Maxwell Kenton, the pseudonym of Terry Southern and Mason Hoffenberg, who wrote it in collaboration for the "dirty book" publisher Olympia Press, which published the novel as part of its "Traveller's Companion" series. ![]()
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