The first printing consisted of 30,000 copies, and was chosen as an alternate selection of the
Book of the Month Club. It was "the subject of considerable pre-publication hyperbole..., soaring in the slip stream of
Fear of Flying,
Erica Jong's bestselling
hymn to the body electric. The novel proves again—if any doubters still remain—that women can write about physical functions just as frankly and, when the genes move them, as raunchily as men. It strikes a blow for the
picara by putting a heroine through the same paces that once animated a
Tom Jones or a
Holden Caulfield. And it suggests that life seen from what was once called the distaff side suspiciously resembles the genitalia-centered existence that male novelists have so long monopolized." ==Critical reception==