When I bought this in the mid 70's I had never heard of Janet Flanner.
It was Paris that I was mad about.
Really enjoyed the book but took the writer for granted.
Here I got to know how the French behaved
between 1925 to 1939,
and gained many insights.
Janet turned out to be a whole world in herself.
But THAT took time.
Now I'm mad about Janet too !!!
And so reread these New Yorker articles with a totally different slant
- they are by a 'friend' I never got to meet
but can still meet constantly.
And I relish her insights.
Published in 1975 with a 17 page introduction by Janet,
-she was to die in November 1978 -
this was a book 'by her' and only indirectly 'about her'.
Move to 1998....
I saw advertised in the TV program on late night TV, around midnight(and this was to be a real case of the witching hour!!!) a show entitled "Paris was a Woman". Another travelogue!!!
I wearily turned it on out of Curiosity and Faithfulness
and stayed rivetted for the next amazing hour.
It was about Amazing Women who had lived in Paris in the 20's and 30's:
Gertrude Stein and Alice B.Toklas, of course.
Then there was Natalie Barney, the American heiress, whose Knights of the Round Table were all ladies naturally, one of whom, a lover, Dorothy Wilde, was the handsome and witty niece of Oscar, and enjoyed appearing at costume parties dressed as her uncle.
Djuana Barnes, another American and writer, wrote a bawdy satire of the Barney salon; while Natalie herself, taking the title "L'Amazone" bestowed by her friend Remy de Gourmont, published "Pensees de l Amazone", a reflection on lesbian life and love.
This was just the pinnacle of a Very Large Iceberg...'hot' ice I'm sure
... and just another subclass of those who flocked to Paris to enjoy Life before the Economic Crash followed by a worse War sent everyone scuttling Home. Hemingway, Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald and James Joyce were others.And there were hundreds more.
AND Janet Flanner was one of them !!!!
Janet cited as her reasons for abandoning America..."puritanism, materialism, hypocrisy and standardization"...adding, "leaving home was part of our sense of liberty...We wanted something we weren't getting."
And what a wonderful gravelly voice she had.
Not shy of attacking Hemingway, whose style, she assured us,
had been sourced from Gertrude Stein,
...and VERY faithfully.
Then, in the local library, came across a, Tome -
"Darlingissima", her wonderful correspondence with Natalia Danesi Murray.
What solid, intelligent, witty, humane, loving, informative epistles these are!!!
What an opus!!
This is where I really got to KNOW Janet.
Superb letters..an education, a revelation, a 'must' reread !!
Felt flat flat flat when I reached the end.
And later...MORE... a biography (1989) in a remainder bookshop...
"GENET...A Biography of Janet Flanner"by Brenda Wineapple,
- 'Genet' was the "nom de plume" for her New Yorker articles -
and I can only agree with May Sarton's "I hated to finish it."
My Cornucopia had dried up
...but seeing I had internalised it, THAT was no problem at all.
Within several months of finishing "Paris Was A Woman"
it only seemed very 'right' that I should find myself IN Paris,
searching out the addresses of Barney, Stein & Toklas, Proust, Colette, Hugo etc.,
meeting up with French friends and avoiding French fries.
I have yet to find Janet's National Book Award winning "Paris Journal 1944- 1965"
soon followed by her "Paris Journal 1965- 1971".
Life IS Goooood !!!