Anaïs Nin A sea of lies

Léonie Bischoff

Book - 2023

"In lithe, sensuous colored pencils, this international prize-winning, impressionistic graphic biography traces the life, the affairs, and the artistic process of Anais Nin, one of the best-known authors of women's erotica in the 1920s and '30s"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

BIOGRAPHY/Nin, Anais
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Nin, Anais Checked In
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Angoulême audience award winner Bischoff's English-language debut is an exhilarating if sometimes disturbing graphic biography of writer and artist Anaïs Nin (1903--1977). "My lies are protective, life-giving," says Nin, whose deceptions include affairs, clandestine meetings, and a secret diary full of explicit erotic fantasies. While married to the loving but naive Hugo Guiler, Nin begins to explore different sides of herself, including the obedient wife, the sexual taboo-breaker, and the passionate devotee of sensuality. After obsessive affairs with the novelist Henry Miller, several psychotherapists, and even (unsettlingly) with family members, Nin vows to reject conventions to "write like a woman" and instead "express the inexpressible." Bischoff is careful to not reduce Nin to her liaisons, which are drawn across a romantic, curlicue depiction of 1930s Paris, but instead delves into how her sexual exploration helps free her as a writer. Bischoff's combination of charcoal and rainbow color palettes echo Nin's double life, while the immersive splash pages blend reality and fantasy. The stunning visuals elevate the titillating but respectful narrative. It's a nuanced, gorgeously drawn portrait of a beautifully complicated figure. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A full-color illumination of the intersection between the renowned writer's creativity and sexuality. In her latest book, which serves as a kind of psychobiography, Brussels-based Swiss cartoonist Bischoff captures both the inner and outer lives of her fascinating subject Anaïs Nin (1903-1977). The narrative opens with Nin's stifling marriage to a banker with his own creative aspirations, a tolerant man who was unable to help his wife unleash the sexuality she knew was within her. In the text, Nin often describes herself as "innocent," and the combination of art and text reflects that side of her--the initiate, the explorer--while a second voice inside her, perhaps the voice of her diaries, urges her to be true to herself. "On the surface, I am calm and secure," she says. "But few know how many women live inside me." During the course of Bischoff's chronicle, Nin encounters a kindred spirit in Henry Miller and becomes even more deeply enraptured by his wife, June. However, it's clear that Miller wants to edit Nin's work to make it more conventional, to have her, she fears, write like a man. Later, a psychiatrist tries to help her with her tumultuous emotional journey while also succumbing to her seductive lure. Then she travels further into forbidden territory with her cousin. Throughout, the illustrations are graphic and sensual without being pornographic. They are at their most powerful when they address Nin's stormy inner life. As she becomes consumed by her dedication to a very daring sort of artistic truth, she defies the conventions of monogamy, heterosexuality, and domesticity. Bischoff effectively demonstrates how Nin splits into different incarnations with the different people who enrapture her and discovers a way to turn her personal truths into celebrated art: "I will make of my life a masterpiece and invent a language to tell it." A dazzling portrait of a complicated writer. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.