Profusely illustrated and painstakingly researched, this book is an enlightening account of women who between wars found their self and their own voice in Paris. Though mostly concerned with the stories of lesbian or bisexual women such as Colette, Gertrude Stein, Alice Toklas, Sylvia Beach, Djuna Barnes and Natalie Barney who came to the City of Light attracted by an aura of unbridled freedom missing in their places of origin, this book will appeal to all those who are interested in this fascinating early period of the twentieth century as well.


There was a greatness there in these women, in that time. They loved Paris and France and the freedom and the people they met there. They came alive living and loving in a city that seemed to inspire them to certain greatness. Poets, writers, artists their talents ran the gamut of art.


For some, their fame was brief - Bryher, H.D. even Djuna Barnes are mere footnotes now if they noted at all. Others, Natalie Barney, Dolly Wilde are notorious for Who they were ..not what they actually did.


Janet Flanner and Mina Loy are names that some might dimly recall. And there is Gertrude Stein and Alice Toklas, who came to personify 'the special relationship' that bound them so tightly together.


The specialness of this book is the use of so much 'private' writing - what they wrote and thought of each other in their own words. The writing is brilliant introspective provocative and sometimes banal. Gertrude wanted to be published, Thelma loved Djuna years after their breakup and Janet managed to stay friends with everyone. There are many photos as well, lavishly illustrated is not an understatement here.

Paris Was a Woman

Paris Was a Woman:

Pandora Press UK and Harper San Francisco USA, 1995.  256 pages.  Hardcover and paperback.  Winner of the 1996 Lambda Book Award (“the Lammies”).


Paris Was a Woman is an illustrated collective portrait of the unique community of women who became known as the 'women of the Left Bank'.  Authors Colette, Djuna Barnes and Gertrude Stein, poets H.D. and Natalie Clifford Barney, painters Romaine Brooks and Marie Laurencin, editors Bryher, Alice Toklas, Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap, photographers Berenice Abbott and Gisele Freund, booksellers Sylvia Beach and Adrienne Monnier, and journalist Janet Flanner all figured in this legendary milieu. A wealth of photographs, paintings, drawings, and literary fragments, many previously unpublished, combine with Andrea Weiss's lively and revealing text to give an unparalleled insight into this extraordinary network of women for whom Paris was neither mistress nor muse, but a different kind of woman.


Check out some reader responses.

www2.hawaii.edu/~lady/lit/reviews/paris.html


Paris Was a Woman (hardcover)  

www.amazon.com/Paris-Was-Woman-Portraits-Left/dp/004440929X


Paris Was a Woman (paperback) 

www.amazon.com/Paris-Was-Woman-Portraits-Left/dp/0062513133/


German Edition: Paris War Eine Frau

www.rowohlt.de/buch/Andrea_Weiss_Paris_war_eine_Frau.21022008.345881.html


Also available in Swedish, Korean, Japanese, and Croatian!



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