Staying on Alone: Letters of Alice B. Toklas

by Alice B. Toklas

Other authorsEdward Burns (Editor)
Paperback, 1982

Status

Available

Publication

Liveright (1982), 452 pages

Description

On tissue-thin paper in a tiny, often undecipherable hand, Alice Toklas described her daily life in Paris in absorbing detail, like a latter-day Madame de Sévigné. Here are shrewd, witty observations on some of the most interesting artists, musicians, and writers of the twentieth century: Thornton Wilder, Carl Van Vechten, Edith Sitwell, Anita Loos, Cecil Beaton, Janet Flanner, Bennett Cerf, among others. There are stories about Picasso, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Juan Gris, Cocteau, and Sartre--all revealing a sharp eye that was as much a part of Alice as her devotion to Gertrude and her passion for recipes and gardening.In preparing this collection, the editor has chosen letters of biographical, literary, and artistic significance to an understanding of Gertrude Stein and her circle, letters illustrating the catholicity of Alice Toklas's friendships and the quality of her gifts, and letters that simply delight for their gossip.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member labwriter
Maybe not too many people know that Alice B. Toklas, lifetime companion of Gertrude Stein, was funny. She was funny in the same way that Yogi Berra is funny, only more acerbic. Gertrude Stein wrote to someone that she needed to get back home to Alice: "If I'm away from her for long I get low in my
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mind."

Alice lived for two decades after Stein died. For those two decades, letter-writing was "my work."
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1973

Physical description

452 p.; 5 inches

ISBN

0871401312 / 9780871401311

Local notes

Autobiography
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