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Mabel Dodge Luhan - Intimate Memories

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This first volume in 1933, of four, of Intimate Memories details incidents that impressed Mabel Dodge Luhan up until she was eighteen. Here she stresses her struggle during childhood and girlhood to become an individual. She says, So the houses I have lived in have shown the natural growth of a personality struggling to become individual, growing through the degrees of crudity to a great sophistication and to simplicity. This struggle takes place before a Victorian background made up of Buffalo, Lenox, Newport, New York, and Europe where at Bayreuth she wrote that Siegfried Wagner ...walked aimless here and there, looking like a waxen sketch of his father, melting a little under the sun. The various members of the family and the friends are carefully presented from the impressions of the child, who studies each with interest. Her first recollections are of her own home and her parents. Even there she felt the vague discontent that gradually shaped itself into a determination to seek the heights and depths of experience. She records from the shifting scenes of playmates, schools, and gravel, incidents that concern the quaint fashions of the time-bustles, stiffly starched window curtains, sleigh rides, dancing classes, white picket fences-and from these incidents gradually evolves a picture of the town and country life of America during the closing era of the nineteenth century. As salon hostess, writer, and muse, she published her four volumes and 1,600 pages of intimate memories all during the 1930s. In vivid and compelling prose, she explored the momentous changes in sexuality, politics, art, and culture that moved Americans from the Victorian into the modern age. Noted for assembling and inspiring some of the leading creative men and women of her day-Gertrude Stein, John Reed, and D. H. Lawrence, among them-she was a mover and shaker of national and international renown during her lifetime. Born in 1879 to a wealthy Buffalo family, Mabel Dodge Luhan earned fame for her friendships with American and European artists, writers and intellectuals and for her influential salons held in her Italian villa and Greenwich Village apartments. In 1917, weary of society and wary of a world steeped in war, she set down roots in remote Taos, New Mexico, then publicized the tiny towns inspirational beauty to the world, drawing a steady stream of significant guests to her adobe estate, including artist Georgia OKeeffe, poet Robinson Jeffers, and authors D.H. Lawrence and Willa Cather. Luhan could be difficult, complex and often cruel, yet she was also generous and supportive, establishing a solid reputation as a patron of the arts and as an author of widely read autobiographies. She died in Taos in 1962.

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New Material 2015 by Sunstone Press All Rights Reserved No part of this book - photo 1
New Material 2015 by Sunstone Press All Rights Reserved No part of this book - photo 2
New Material 2015 by Sunstone Press All Rights Reserved No part of this book - photo 3
New Material 2015 by Sunstone Press. All Rights Reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
Sunstone books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets Department, Sunstone Press, P.O. Box 2321, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2321.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Luhan, Mabel Dodge, 1879-1962.
Intimate memories / by Mabel Dodge Luhan; new foreword by Lynn Cline.
pages cm. -- (Southwest heritage series)
Originally published: New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, Inc., 1933.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-63293-076-7 (softcover: alk. paper)
ISBN 978-1-61139-396-5 (e-book)
1. Luhan, Mabel Dodge, 1879-1962. 2. Intellectuals--United States--Biography. 3. Taos (N.M.)--Intellectual life. 4. Taos (N.M.)--Biography. I. Cline, Lynn. II. Title.
CT275.L838A3 2015
978.9'53092--dc23
[B]
2015022926
WWW.SUNSTONEPRESS.COM
SUNSTONE PRESS / POST OFFICE BOX 2321 / SANTA FE, NM 87504-2321 /USA
(505) 988-4418 / ORDERS ONLY (800) 243-5644 / FAX (505) 988-1025
CONTENTS
I THE SOUTHWEST HERITAGE SERIES The past is not dead In fact its not even - photo 4
I
THE SOUTHWEST HERITAGE SERIES
The past is not dead. In fact, it's not even past.
William Faulkner, Requiem for a Nun
T he history of the United States is written in hundreds of regional histories and literary works. Those letters, essays, memoirs, biographies and even collections of fiction are often first-hand accounts by people who wanted to memorialize an event, a person or simply record for posterity the concerns and issues of the times. Many of these accounts have been lost, destroyed or overlooked. Some are in private or public collections but deemed to be in too fragile condition to permit handling by contemporary readers and researchers.
However, now with the application of twenty-first century technology, nineteenth and twentieth century material can be reprinted and made accessible to the general public. These early writings are the DNA of our history and culture and are essential to understanding the present in terms of the past.
The Southwest Heritage Series is a form of literary preservation. Heritage by definition implies legacy and these early works are our legacy from those who have gone before us. To properly present and preserve that legacy, no changes in style or contents have been made. The material reprinted stands on its own as it first appeared. The point of view is that of the author and the era in which he or she lived. We would not expect photographs of people from the past to be re-imaged with modern clothes, hair styles and backgrounds. We should not, therefore, expect their ideas and personal philosophies to reflect our modern concepts.
Remember, reading their words and sharing their thoughts is a passport back into understanding how the past was shaped and how it influenced today's world.
Our hope is that new access to these older books will provide readers with a challenging and exciting experience.
II
FOREWORD TO THIS EDITION
by
Lynn Cline
M abel Dodge Luhan has yet to achieve the kind of iconic status bestowed on Georgia O'Keeffe and Willa Cather, despite her nearly legendary presence in Taos, New Mexico from late 1917 until her death there in 1962. Instead, her lesser-known legacy includes a rambling adobe that has been turned into a historic inn; an extensive collection of papers archived at Yale's Beinecke Library; a four-volume autobiography, Intimate Memories; and Winter in Taos, which offers a simple description of life in 1930s northern New Mexico patterned on the cycles of the seasons.
Luhan's success as a writer pales in comparison to the stature of the literary guests she invited to Taos, including author D.H. Lawrence, poet Robinson Jeffers, and playwright and novelist Thornton Wilder. She never intended, however, to become a famous scribe. Having settled in Taos after living in Florence, Italy and Greenwich Village, New York, where her influential salons earned her an international reputation, she sought to put Taos, and herself as an arbiter of culture, on the world map.
Entranced by northern New Mexico's rugged landscape and ancient cultures, Luhan hoped to reveal Pueblo cultural traditions to the Western world, believing that the Pueblo people's life rhythms, bound tightly to the natural world, could restore a modern civilization beleaguered by war and bereft of faith. She worked hard to ensure that Cather, O'Keeffe, Lawrence, Jeffers and dozens of other significant creative guests who trekked to her adobe compound experienced the power of Taos first-hand.
Luhan fervently hoped that Lawrence would write a book about Taos Pueblo that would convince Americans to see Taos the way she did. Lawrence, who didn't share her enthusiasm for Pueblo culture, never produced such a book, though he did fall in love with the region's beauty. Other guests found life in Taos fascinating, but too remote and isolated for their tastes. Luhan, however, remained determined to live out her dream. She married Tony Luhan, a Taos Pueblo man, and immersed herself as much as possible in a new world that replaced all the ways I had known with others, more strange and terrible and sweet than any I had ever been able to imagine, she wrote in Edge of Taos Desert.
Published in 1935, Winter in Taos starkly contrasts Luhan's memoirs, Background (1933), European Experiences (1935), Movers and Shakers (1936) and Edge of Taos Desert (1937). The four volumes, inspired by Marcel Proust's Remembrances of Things Past, begin with her birth in 1879 in Buffalo, New York to a wealthy Victorian family and follow her life through three failed marriages, numerous affairs, and ultimately a feeling of being nobody in myself, despite years of psychoanalysis and a luxurious lifestyle on two continents among the leading literary, art and intellectual personalities of the day.
Winter in Taos unfolds in an entirely different pattern, uncluttered with noteworthy names and ornate details. With no chapters dividing the narrative, it takes place on a single wintry day, yet moves well beyond the moment as Luhan describes her simple life in this new world from season to season, following a thread that spools out from her consciousness as if she's recording her thoughts in a journal. My pleasure is in being very still and sensing things, she writes, sharing that pleasure with the reader by describing the joys of adobe rooms warmed in winter by aromatic cedar fires; fragrant in spring with flowers; and scented with homegrown fruits and vegetables being preserved and pickled in summer. She also delights in describing the traits of her cat, dogs, horses and the flock of pigeons residing at the 17-room adobe she and Tony designed that holds me, works me to death, bores me and will not let me go!
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