Nin has a way of capturing people through their relationships, making them fluid, as we all are, in their travels with one another. This is a narrative quality I have always found brilliant, and it allows the characters in the work to become recognizable, almost as if they were written from one's...
Anaïs Nin has some of the most eloquent, honest quotes I have ever seen; her way of writing is an observation of life, love, and human interaction that is unabashedly lifelike that you immediately find yourself in her work, even if she is simply writing a passing thought in her diary documentatio...
Another part to Nin's larger Cities of the Interior collection. We meet Djuna again in Paris, this time with her lover, Rango. He has a boat on the Seine which is where most of their trysts take place. However, in typical Nin fashion, Rango is already married to the questionably mad Zora, and ...