|
Insel
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Insel
|
Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Mina Loy
|
Series | Neversink |
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:188 | Dimensions(mm): Height 203,Width 127 |
|
Category/Genre | Modern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945) |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781612193533
|
Classifications | Dewey:823.912 |
---|
Audience | |
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Melville House Publishing
|
Imprint |
Melville House Publishing
|
Publication Date |
13 May 2014 |
Publication Country |
United States
|
Description
Loosely based on Loy's real friendship with the German painter Richard Oelze, Insel is the only novel by the inimitable modernist poet and artist Mina Loy, which was never published during her lifetime. It tells the story of an unusual friendship between the narrator (a stand-in for Loy herself) and Insel, a surrealist painter of great talent but terrible living habits. Insel is an unforgettable character: the ultimate charming freeloader who sweeps into the narrator's life and overturns everything.
Author Biography
Mina Loy (1882-1966) was born Mina Gertrude Lowy in London to a Hungarian father and an English mother. Originally trained as a painter, she was at the center of all the great artistic movements of the first half of the twentieth century: she wrote Futurist manifestos in Italy (including the "Feminist Manifesto," which denounced the misogyny and incipient fascist tendencies of Futurism); her poem "Brancusi's Golden Bird" appeared alongside T. S. Eliot's "The Waste Land" in The Dial; she starred in plays in Greenwich Village in the 1920s with William Carlos Williams; she was friends with Duchamp and Man Ray; she ran a lampshade business with Peggy Guggenheim; and in the 1940s, she lived on the Bowery, where she collected trash for found-art collages, as in the style of her friend Joseph Cornell, whose work she championed. During one of her earlier stints in New York, she met the love of her life, Arthur Cravan, the Dadaist poet and boxer who disappeared in mysterious circumstances shortly after their marriage. Only two collections of her work were published in her lifetime, Lunar Baedecker (1923) and Lunar Baedecker and the Time Tables (1958). She died in Aspen, Colorado, in 1966. Elizabeth Arnold, a scholar and poet, is the author of Effacement and two other collections. Sarah Hayden is Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow at the School of English, University College Cork. Her monograph, Curious Disciplines: Mina Loy and Avant-Garde Artisthood, is forthcoming in the Recencies series at University of New Mexico Press.
Reviews"What is remarkable is that, for all the slipperiness of the novel's prose, the characters and their concrete world come throughl.. The truly wonderful force in Loy's novel, the subject worthy of our fascination, is Mrs. Jones's fascination itself." -Wall Street Journal "In a year of rediscoveries, Mina Loy's Insel stands out." -Flavorwire, 50 Best Independent Fiction and Poetry Books of 2014 "Much of Mina Loy's Insel is as slippery and effervescent as the novel's downtrodden Bohemian martyr and title star... The novel challenges the restrictions of literary expectations, infusing prose with poetry, surrealism with modernism." -Bookslut "A treasure... Insel is a powerful document of its age and place, and it tells a timeless story of art and friendship, love and fascination." -Publishers Weekly, 10 Best Novels by Poets "Mina Loy's neglected modernist novel...now gets a second outing from Melville House with a new ending unearthed from the archives... Intriguing... fervent ... her target is ... an image of a patriarchal and disengaged avant-garde that has let the 'present actuality...go hang.'" -Times Literary Supplement "Refreshing, challenging, and brilliant... Insel's republication, which includes a thoughtful and contextualizing introduction, afterword, and appendices, marks another occasion: to remark on Loy's indisputable relevance to literary history, and literature's futures." -Feministing Praise for Mina Loy "[In The Lost Lunar Baedeker,] Mina Loy's wry, confident inquiries into the nature of men, women and sexuality are a great undiscovered treasure of modernism." -Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Her utter absence from all canonical lists is one of modern literary history's most perplexing data." -Hugh Kenner, The New York Times "Among the great modernist poets, Mina Loy was surely the greatest wit, the most sophisticated commentator on the vagaries of love." -Marjorie Perloff "Is there anyone in America except you, Bill [William Carlos Williams,] and Mina Loy who can write anything of interest in verse?" -Ezra Pound, letter to Marianne Moore "By divergent virtues these two women [Mina Loy and Marianne Moore] have achieved freshness of presentation, novelty, freedom, break with banality." -William Carlos Williams "You'd know a Loy poem when you read one; you'd recognize her art work as distinctively hers. And maybe that's the mark she would have most cared to leave on the world-literary and visual art made, unmistakably, by a true original." -The Nervous Breakdown
|