In flashback and from the depths of her basement apartment in Earls
Court, Esther describes the history of her marital disaster--in between
her consumption of chocolate cake, tinned fruit, sweet sherry, and a
host of other high calorie confections. Funny, bizarre, and painful in
equal doses, this novel, like her other works Down Among the Women and
Female Friends, examines the role of womanhood. The time is the mid
1960s when sex role stereotypes were being examined and rejected, and
The Fat Woman's Joke miraculously reflects the passions, humor, and
anger of an era when women's self analysis entailed a healthy dose of
disruption. Weldon depicts the rage and outrage of that era while
examining the interplay of pain and humor that so often characterizes
changing romantic relationships.