Nightwood
: The Original Version and Related Drafts by Djuna Barnes, Cheryl J. Plumb (Editor)
"Written in convoluted and poetic language,
Nightwood is an obsessive romance illuminating the demonic
and destructive aspects of love. It tells the story of a beautiful
young woman, Robin Vote, and Nora and Jenny, the two women who
desire her and are eventually overwhelmed and destroyed by their
own passions. Robin Vote, sketchy and paradoxical, angelic yet
amoral, intriguing because of what is kept from the reader rather
than what is revealed, is the pivotal point upon which the story
turns. A gothic undercurrent charges the book with tension: human
is transformed into beast, beast into human. This theme appears
over and over, and Djuna Barnes' obsessive telling of the tale
melds style with subject matter. Throughout the book, Djuna Barnes
interjects monologues from Dr. Matthew O'Connor, a gender-bending
character and unusual literary device whose monologues illuminate
the storyline and provide a cohesive understanding of the plot.
Formal, dense, even verbose, yet fluid and vivid, Nightwood
circles and spirals, swirling around the shadowy plot to create a
timeless tale of love and tragedy" -- Heather Downey
"Djuna Barnes remains a reminder of the
Road Not Yet Taken international, devious, perverse, verbally
abundant, psychologically subtle." -- Edmund White, Voice
Literary Supplement 11-95
"Admired by Joyce, Nightwood is as
important to the history of the 20th century novel as Finnegans
Wakeand more readable." -- Miranda Seymour, New York Times
Book Review 11-26-95
"Nightwood . . . is one of the top ten
novels written this century and is undoubtedly . . . one of the
greatest gay novels ever written. It is a magnificent, passionate,
lyrical work which probes deep beneath the surface skin of life
where so many novels are content to stay. . . . The editor, Cheryl
J. Plumb, is to be congratulated . . . It is a work which goes on
resonating after every reading." -- Gay Times 3-96
"I read Nightwood back in the 1930s and was
very taken with it. I consider it one of the great books of the
twentieth century." -- William Burroughs
"[Nightwood possesses] the great
achievement of a style, the beauty of phrasing, the brilliance of
wit and characterisation, and a duality of horror and doom very
nearly related to that of Elizabethan tragedy." -- T. S.
Eliot

Paris Was a Woman
Directed by Greta Schiller

From the director of Before Stonewall
comes this alternately interesting and scholarly documentary
centering on the lives of several expatriates who lived and worked
in Paris between the wars. Paris, specifically the area known as
the Left Bank, became an intellectual, religious, racial, sexual
and political haven for so many artists, including Hemingway,
Joyce and Picasso. But this well-researched documentary probes past the
era's "stars" and focuses on the many women and lesbians
who also thrived, those being Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas,
publishers Sylvia Beach and Adrienne Monnier, New Yorker
columnist Janet Flanner, heiress Natalie Barney, painter Romaine
Brooks, and Djuna Barnes and her lover Thelma Woods. Narrated by
Juliet Stevenson, and written by Andrea Weiss.
Starring: Sharl
Benstock, Berthe, Giselle Freund, Sam Steward, Dr.
Catherine Stimpson
Label: Zeitgeist
( 1995, 75 min, US )