![]() ![]() There’s a lot of correspondence in this book, correspondence between Nin and famous friends that she has, including Marguerite Young, Lawrence Durrell, and Henry Miller. I think our dreams, reveries were meant to be absorbed organically and gradually, tempered by daylight, cushioned by humble occupations and drab interruptions." "It was not humanly bearable, the separation from one's centre, the total voyage into an atmosphere, a rhythm, a space not in harmony with one's physical body. Crazy or genius? Regardless of what I think, it was definitely a learning experience for her. ![]() I mean it’s not the first time I heard her talk about it but it does surprise me that she was willing to do that for her craft. ![]() I'm still not sure why she felt the need to do LSD. But finally in Volume 6, Nin experiences the success she so deserves. You can't help but really admire Nin's craft she continued pressing forward and writing books in her genre despite people rejecting them as being too neurotic. ![]()
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