Conceived with Malice: Literature as Revenge in the Lives of Woolf, Lawrence, Barnes, Miller

by Louise Desalvo

50 Members ½ (4.44)

On This Page

Description

"Every creative act is a declaration of war," wrote Henry Miller. This fascinating book examines the motive of revenge as a catalyst for the creative process. Evoking Bloomsbury and Paris in the twenties and thirties, acclaimed biographer Louise De Salvo focuses on four famous literary partnerships where the written word was used as a weapon of revenge. Like her pioneering Virginia Woolf: The Impact of Childhood Sexual Abuse on Her Life and Work, Conceived with Malice challenges our show more conceptions of how and why great works of literature are written. The "ideal" marriage of Leonard and Virginia Woolf not only linked Leonard Woolf to a partner far more talented than he but "elevated" him to a social class that dismissed him as the son of a Jewish shopkeeper. His retaliation was the novel The Wise Virgins, actually penned during the couple's honeymoon. It portrayed a thinly disguised Virginia as deranged and sexually inadequate, sending the shattered bride spiralling toward depression and attempted suicide. The mercurial relationship between D. H. Lawrence, a coal miner's son, and his patron Lady Ottoline Morrell, whose list of lovers included Bertrand Russell, Roger Fry, and Henry Lamb, began as a union of "soulmates" but deteriorated into an enmity that spawned Lawrence's vicious portrait of her as the morally corrupt Hermione Roddice in Women in Love. The legendary writer Djuna Barnes reveals the psychic wound that lay at the core of her classic novels Nightwood and Ryder - and that at last was excruciatingly exposed in her final major work, The Antiphon, the amazing play that discloses a family history of multiple incest and child abuse, making her pain-filled and boldly experimental work all too comprehensible. Henry Miller's wife, June, the beautiful, strung-out, coked-up taxi dancer who kept him up all night talking about writers, who lived with him and her lesbian lover in a squalid Brooklyn apartment, nearly drove him mad. But she also became his lodestone over forty years of writing, from his first novel, Crazy Cock - only recently published - through Tropic of Cancer and his later classics. Full of enticing literary gossip, Conceived with Malice is also a daring exploration of the dark side of the creative process, analyzing much never-before-addressed material in each of these writers' lives. Blending consummate scholarship with great narrative skill, Louise DeSalvo vividly describes how these great literary figures each perceived an attack on the self - and struck back through their art, creating lasting monuments to their deepest hurts and darkest obsessions. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

Picture of author.
18+ Works 1,158 Members
Louise A. DeSalvo was born Louise Anita Sciacchetano in Jersey City, New Jersey on September 27, 1942. She received a bachelor's degree in English from Douglass College in 1963. She taught at Wood-Ridge High School for four years before receiving a master's degree in English in 1972 and a Ph.D. in English in 1977 from New York University. She show more taught at Fairleigh Dickinson University from 1977 to 1982 before becoming a professor of English and creative writing at Hunter College. She was an authority on Virginia Woolf and a memoirist on Italian-American culture. She wrote and edited numerous books including Virginia Woolf: The Impact of Childhood Sexual Abuse on Her Life and Work; Between Women: Biographers, Novelists, Critics, Teachers and Artists Write About Their Work on Women; Territories of the Voice: Short Stories by Irish Women; The Letters of Vita Sackville-West to Virginia Woolf; The Milk of Almonds: Italian American Women Writers on Food and Culture; Writing as a Way of Healing; and The Art of Slow Writing. She wrote several memoirs including Crazy in the Kitchen, Chasing Ghosts, The House of Early Sorrows, and Vertigo, which won the Gay Talese Award. Her novel, Casting Off, was published in 1987. She died from metastatic breast cancer on October 31, 2018 at the age of 76. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Conceived with Malice: Literature as Revenge in the Lives of Woolf, Lawrence, Barnes, Miller
People/Characters
Leonard Woolf; Virginia Woolf; Djuna Barnes; Henry Miller; D. H. Lawrence

Classifications

Genres
Literature Studies and Criticism, Nonfiction, Fiction and Literature, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
823.91209353Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991901-1945
LCC
PR471 .D47Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureBy periodModern20th century
BISAC

Statistics

Members
50
Popularity
605,305
Rating
½ (4.44)
Languages
English, Portuguese
Media
Paper
ISBNs
5