Part of the reason critics were so appalled was because while Talese was gallivanting promiscuously and publicly, he was married, and not just to some anonymous wife but to Nan Talese, an important book editor at Random House whom many of the critics knew personally, professionally, or socially. Instead, the book garnered him the worst reviews of his career (while also making him millions-the $2.5 million he was paid for film rights remained a record until 1991). Maybe if I had put that in a subhead on the cover I might have gotten a better hearing.” You have to hang out! I wanted to write about sexuality and the changing definition of morality. You have to have a kind of affair with your sources. “If you want to write about orgies,” says Talese, who at 77 is still slim and handsome, “you’re not going to be in the press box with your little press badge keeping your distance. It’s the research itself-particularly Talese’s tendency to take the participant-observer concept to the extreme-that turned out to be the unintended legacy of the project. The book, originally published in 1980, is about the sexual revolution, which Talese believed would be the most important cultural shift in decades, and which he spent most of the seventies intimately researching.
This month, Ecco re-published Thy Neighbor’s Wife, with a foreword by Katie Roiphe (along with a new edition of Honor Thy Father, foreword by Pete Hamill). What’s absurd about the fact that I missed the rainbow vagina painting is that the subject of our conversation is, in so many words, sex. It is here where they began their life together as a couple in their mid-twenties, when the five-story brownstone was like a tenement and Gay lived in 3F, a studio they both still refer to as his “bachelor pad” this is where they raised their two daughters, Pamela and Catherine, and slowly took over every apartment in the building before finally buying it in 1973 this is where they have held innumerable book parties for Nan’s celebrated authors and this is where Gay has done much of the writing-the historic Esquire pieces, the best sellers with biblical titles-that brought him fame, fortune, and no small amount of personal agony. This legendary literary marriage-in all of its baroque complexity-has taken place entirely under this roof. In fact, in June they will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary, an impressive milestone for any couple, but perhaps few more so than this one.
Talese/Doubleday books, have lived for half a century. We are in the otherwise staid living room of his townhouse in the East Sixties, the home where he and his wife, Nan, the publisher of Nan A. It isn’t until our third interview that I notice Gay Talese has been sitting underneath a painting of a naked woman with a rainbow coming out of her vagina.