I Am Alien to Life, Djuna Barnes
I Am Alien to Life, Djuna Barnes
List: $15.99 | Sale: $11.20
Club: $7.99

I Am Alien to Life
Selected Stories

Author: Djuna Barnes, Merve Emre, Merve Emre

Narrator: Xe Sands

Unabridged: 6 hr 22 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 10/22/2024


Synopsis

Djuna Barnes is rightly remembered for Nightwood, her breakthrough and final novel: a hallmark of modernist literature, championed by T. S. Eliot, and one of the first, strangest, and most brilliant novels of love between women to be published in the twentieth century. Barnes's career began long before Nightwood, however, with journalism, essays, drama, and satire of extraordinary wit and courage. Long into her later life, after World War II, when she published nothing more, it was her short fiction above all that she prized and would continue to revise.

Here are all the stories Barnes sought to preserve, in the versions she preferred, as well as a smattering of rarities as selected by critic and New Yorker contributor Merve Emre. These are tales of women "'tragique' and 'triste' and 'tremendous' all at once," of sons and daughters being initiated into the ugly comedy of life, monuments all to a worldview singular and scathing. As Emre writes in her foreword "[Barnes's] themes are love and death, especially in Paris and New York; the corruption of nature by culture; the tainted innocence of children; and the mute misery of beasts . . . her characters may be alien to life, but they are alive—spectacularly, grotesquely alive."

About Djuna Barnes

Djuna Barnes (1892-1982) was an American writer and artist known for her novel Nightwood, a cult classic of lesbian fiction and an important work of modernist literature. She played a significant part in the development of twentieth-century English-language modernist writing and was one of the key figures in 1920s and 1930s bohemian Paris after filling a similar role in the Greenwich Village of the teens.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Marjorie on December 29, 2024

I had the privelege of living for two years in Patchin Place, across the street from where Djuna Barnes had suffered, lived and breathed her last. e e cummings lived there as did Theodore Dreiser, John Reed, and John Cowper Powys. The creative energy was palpable in the mews. Now, three decades late......more

Goodreads review by Aye on April 25, 2025

Random book store pickup. Holy focking shit. The second i finished this book immediately began to re read the whole thing because that’s how incredible it was. I have no words. Well i have some words. Djuna barnes I am so fascinated with you and your life i hope we can kiss one day in gay heaven. Sh......more

Goodreads review by Oscreads on January 28, 2025

Characters written like this are worth reading.......more

Goodreads review by Claire on February 15, 2025

Beautiful and weird, different but all the same. I imagine she'd be friends with Agatha Christie. I am questioning everything/......more

Goodreads review by Travisimo5 on October 23, 2024

Haunting, enigmatic short fiction. I am so grateful to the editor Merve Emre for bringing this collection to the world. I may have never encountered this otherwise- as I’ve not come across the author’s name before in my seeking. One that I shall revisit.......more