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  1. 1 de jan. de 2000 · Despite these behemoths, "Nightwood" stands proudly alongside them at a mere 153. As any physicist will tell you, a novel's density is not solely dependent on its volume. It has to have mass, and "Nightwood's" gravitas is made all the more salient for being able to weave such power, beauty, and tragedy into its small volume.

  2. Her Ladies Almanack was privately printed in Paris in 1928, the same year that Liveright in the United States published Ryder, her first novel. The book on which Barnes's fame largely rests is Nightwood (1936), a surrealistic story set in Paris and the United States, dealing with the complex relationships among a group of strangely obsessed characters, most of them homosexuals and lesbians.

  3. LADIES ALMANACK. 1. LADIES ALMANACK. For such then was Evangeline Musset created, a Dame of lofty Lineage, who, in the early eighties, had discarded her family Tandem, in which her Mother and Father found Pleasure enough, for the distorted Amusement of riding all smack−of−astride, like any Yeoman going to gather in his Crops; and with much ...

  4. 14 de jul. de 2017 · Nightwood was edited by T.S. Eliot. Barnes, then in her mid-40s, was still overwhelmed by the breakup with her lover, Thelma Wood. The novel follows the obsessive love affair of two women, which led to Barnes being called a “lesbian evangelist.”. Despite the real-life parallel, Barnes despised and denied the label.

  5. Carolyn Allen describes Nightwood and the Ladies Almanack as such in, ‘Looking Like a Lesbian/Poet’, in The Modern Woman Revisited, eds Whitney Chadwick and Tirza True Latimer (New Brunswick, London: Rutgers University Press, 2003), 148. Google Scholar

  6. 6 de fev. de 2016 · She later used her art world connections to fund a literary career of her own, gaining notoriety for Nightwood (1936) a cult classic lesbian novel and a pioneering work of modernist fiction. Beginning in 1921, she lived for fifteen years in Paris as a correspondent for McCall’s .

  7. Her Ladies Almanack was privately printed in Paris in 1928, the same year that Liveright in the United States published Ryder, her first novel. The book on which Barnes's fame largely rests is Nightwood (1936), a surrealistic story set in Paris and the United States, dealing with the complex relationships among a group of strangely obsessed characters, most of them homosexuals and lesbians.