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22+ Obras 311 Miembros 3 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Series

Obras de Mary Butts

Obras relacionadas

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Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Butts, Mary Franeis
Fecha de nacimiento
1890-12-13
Fecha de fallecimiento
1937-03-05
Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugar de nacimiento
Poole, Dorset, England, Uk
Lugar de fallecimiento
Penzance, Cornwall, England, UK
Lugares de residencia
Dorset, England, UK
Cornwall, England, UK
Paris, France
London, England, UK
Riviera, France
Educación
Westfield College
St. Leonard's Ladies' College
London School of Economics
Ocupaciones
short story writer
essayist
poet
novelist
diarist
memoirist
Relaciones
McAlmon, Robert (publisher)
Rodker, John (1st husband)
Biografía breve
Mary Butts was born in Poole, Dorset, and brought up at Salterns, an 18th-century house overlooking Poole Harbour, described in her memoir The Crystal Cabinet (1937). After her father's death in 1905, she was sent as a boarder to St. Leonard's School. She then studied at Westfield College in London and the London School of Economics, from which she graduated in 1914. She became a student of Aleister Crowley and received a co-author credit on his book Magick Book 4 (1912). During World War I, she volunteered as a social worker in the East End of London and met John Rodker, a writer and pacifist. They married in 1918 and had a daughter. Mary helped her husband set up in business as a publisher, and was part of modernist literary circles that included T.S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Ezra Pound, Wyndham Lewis, Ford Madox Ford, and Roger Fry. During the early 1920s, she lived between London, Paris, and the French Riviera. She had affairs with both men and women. Mary Butts wrote poems, essays, short stories, nonfiction, reviews, and a pair of stream of consciousness novels. Her first book of stories, Speed the Plough and Other Stories appeared in 1923, followed by her first novel, Ashe of Rings (1925), which was published by Robert McAlmon. Her second novel was Armed with Madness (1928). In 1930, after she and Rodker were divorced, Mary Butts married William Park "Gabriel" Aitken, a painter, and settled with him on the western tip of Cornwall. She was working on a study of the Roman emperor Julian the Apostate when she died at age 46, following surgery for a perforated gastric ulcer.

Miembros

Debates

THE DEEP ONES: "With and Without Buttons" by Mary Butts en The Weird Tradition (agosto 2021)

Reseñas

These are beautifully written novels, filled with magic and ritual, suffused with the sea, hills, and woods of southwest England. While set in the contemporary world of early 20th century, they have the sensibility of Arthurian romances. Butts has a unique prose style, characterized by short phrases and abrupt periods. Her sentences have the quality of breath.
 
Denunciada
le.vert.galant | otra reseña | Nov 19, 2019 |
I just read Armed with Madness but I will post a review anyway. Someday I may well read Death of Felicity Taverner and then I suppose I will update this review. It's a tricky business, trying to figure out what is a work versus part of a work versus multiple works. Ha!

This was written in 1928 - really? It is crisp, fresh. OK, sufficiently redolent of say John Cowper Powys and Aldous Huxley that its time is not so surprising. But to move as crisply as Huxley while touching the depths of Powys - that is no small feat!

I am sure that most of this went over my head. It's funny, Jung gets dismissed while the focus is more on Freud. Yet here we have the Holy Grail. The whole thing seems to walk out of a seance.

These novels got mentioned in a book of interviews with the poet Robert Duncan, A Poet's Mind. Very appropriately, I would say. Not that I know Duncan't poetry, but from the interviews I have read so far. How much history and myth would a person have to know to pick up what is going on here? Are the characters here all actually modeled on the Grail Myth? Picus was ill but then revived instantly the Grail was found. But that is just a small detail at the beginning. Maybe what is here is more like all the bits and pieces of myth then rearranged in a new pattern. That would be nice! I am a physicist. It's like: all machinery is based on the same basic natural laws, but still those basic laws can play through infinitely various patterns. But I am not smart enough to see here what is a law and what is a pattern.

I will say, the story is totally engrossing despite my ignorance. I don't feel spoken down to. Yeah, I do feel entrance. Hmmm, I read a Lawrence Durrell novel once, maybe Tunc or maybe Nunquam, I forget. Maybe that is similar flavor to this.

It's a small set of characters here and there is a wild tension afoot. It is like a mathematical puzzle. Maybe like a spread of the Tarot cards. Powerful, raw, but not like an indulgence in sensual impulse or any of that. There is a sort of urgent quest for meaning here.

***

Now, a few years later, I have read the second novel here, The Death of Felicity Taverner.

There are several layers at work here. At a plot level, there is a conflict between a family that has lived in the beautiful old English countryside, and a newcomer who wants to commercialize the area for London-based weekenders. So this embodies a clash of cultures, of old traditional life versus modern life. Then there is a layer that wanders around anthropology and psychology and mythology, with references to the Electra complex etc. At the base is the language of the novel, with its rich descriptions of places and people. The point of view shifts among the characters.

The book reminds me a bit of Glasonbury Romance by John Cowper Powys. It's like the characters are driven by cosmic forces that also run through the natural environment.

The first half of the novel is slow as the characters get built up. Then the second half moves a lot faster as events unfold.
… (más)
3 vota
Denunciada
kukulaj | otra reseña | Jan 8, 2013 |
The novella is unconvincing but i greatly enjoyed her essays -- some of them prescient.
½
 
Denunciada
sibylline | Jan 10, 2010 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
22
También por
6
Miembros
311
Popularidad
#75,820
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
22
Idiomas
1
Favorito
1

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