The Four-Chambered Heart: Nin's Continuous Novel Vol III

aw_product_id: 
34057102309
merchant_image_url: 
https://cdn.waterstones.com/bookjackets/large/9780/8040/9780804001212.jpg
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
13.99
book_author_name: 
Anais Nin
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
Ohio University Press
published_date: 
01/01/1959
isbn: 
9780804001212
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Fiction > Modern & contemporary fiction
specifications: 
Anais Nin|Paperback|Ohio University Press|01/01/1959
Merchant Product Id: 
9780804001212
Book Description: 
The Four-Chambered Heart, Anau00efs Nin's 1950 novel, recounts the real-life affair she conducted with cafu00e9 guitarist Gonzalo Moru00e9 in 1936. Nin and Moru00e9 rented a house-boat on the Seine, and under the pervading influence of the boat's watchman and Moru00e9's wife Helba, developed a relationship. Moru00e9 named the boat Nanankepichu, meaning "not really a home." In the novel, which Nin drew from her experiences on the boat, the characters are clearly based. Djuna is an embodiment of Nin herself. A young dancer in search of fulfillment, she encapsulates all that the author was striving for at that time. The character of Djuna features in other novels, perhaps weaving a directly autobiographical thread into Nin's fiction. The gypsy musician, Rango, is therefore Moru00e9, and his invalid wife is Zora. The old watchman is present as a force which, along with Zora, works against the lovers in their quest for happiness. Nin's main concern is the "outside," and how it affects the "interior." Water is a cleverly used theme. u201cI have no great fear of depths,u201d says Djuna, u201cand a great fear of shallow living.u201d Rango and Djuna's relationship is, in effect, their effort to remain afloat. Often, Nin employs a stream of consciousness, especially in her flowing analyses of love, life and music, which continues the water image. Anau00efs Nin's writing is typically exquisite in its detail and texture. She describes Paris: its "black lacquered cobblestones" and "silver filigree trees." The "humid scarfs of fog" on the river, and "the sharp incense of roasted chestnuts" reveal their source through their reality: Nin's personal experience.

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