Truly Wilde by Joan Schenkar

Truly Wilde

The Unsettling Story of Dolly Wilde, Oscar’s Unusual Niece

Joan Schenkar

She was lovely, sophisticated, and famous for her witty conversation, even in a social circle that was known for its fabulous talkers. The only child of Oscar Wilde’s dissipated older brother Willie, Dolly Wilde (1895-1941) led a life as scandalous and glittering as her uncle’s: she, too, loved her own sex, and her longest romantic relationship was with American heiress Natalie Clifford Barney, who was host of the most important Parisian literary salon of the 20th century. Unfortunately for Dolly’s posthumous reputation, she ‘was an artist of the spoken word’ whose only written legacy was her marvelous correspondence. Quoting liberally and perceptively from those letters, American playwright Joan Schenkar brings Wilde to life in a modernist biography that is written in prose as sparkling as Dolly’s fabled bons mots. Schenkar eschews conventional chronology to consider Wilde’s life thematically, from her lesbianism to her taste for smart society to her self-destructive identification with Uncle Oscar. She reminds us just how remarkable and accomplished were the women at Barney’s salon (journalist Janet Flanner, novelist Djuna Barnes, and artist Mina Loy, among them) and how much they esteemed Dolly Wilde. Yet, her biographer downplays neither Wilde’s addiction to drugs nor the sad loneliness of her death (possibly from a drug overdose) at age 45. This is essentially a tale of ‘squandered gifts and lost opportunities,’ Schenkar acknowledges, but she successfully provokes readers to share her admiration for Wilde’s prodigal generosity with both her talent and her affections. –Wendy Smith

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Details

ISBN 465087728
Genre Award Winner; Autobiography/Biography
Copyright Date 2000
Publication Date 19-Oct-00
Publisher HarperCollins
Format Hardcover
No. of Pages 442
Language English
Rating Great
Paper Type Electronic Format Available
BookID 13575

Author: LFWBooks