Ladies almanack : showing their signs and their tides, their moons and their changes, the seasons as it is with them, their eclipses and equinoxes, as well ... record of diurnal and nocturnal distempers

by Djuna Barnes

Book, 1928

Notes

An affectionate lampoon of the expatriate lesbian community in Paris in the 1920s
Online at munseys.com

Description

"Lesbianism, its flories and sorows, is the subject and quest of this marvelously erverse sentimental journey by Nightwood's author... A striking lesbian mainfesto and a deft parody." --Library Journal Blending fiction, myth, and revisionary parody and accompanied by the author's delightful illustrations, Ladies Almanac is also a brilliant modernist composition and arguably the most audacious lesbian text of its time. While the book pokes fun at the wealthy expatriates who were Barnes' literary contemporaries and remains controversial today, it seems to have delighted its cast of characters, which was also the first audience. Barney herself subsidized its private publication in 1928. Fifty of the 1050 copies of the first edition were hand colored by the author, who was identified only as a lady of Fashion: on the title page.… (more)

Collection

Genres

Publication

[Paris : Black Manikin Press], 1928. 1st ed., 84 pages
Page: 0.1214 seconds