genre: biography
Margaret Anderson's decision to leave Indiana and go to Chicago to find a way to be a writer would pivot her life in ways she could've never imagined. From editing a pioneering art and literature magazine to being arrested on obscenity charges for serially publishing the new work Ulysses by James Joyce, Margaret lived a big life. She wanted to be surrounded by new and beautiful things and ideas - and, most especially, perhaps, to live her life openly as the lesbian she knew she was. The circles she found herself in and the relationships she made show a portrait of a women full of contradictions who wanted to create something that could spark discussion and expose a core of creativity and modernism.
I'm not sorry I read this because I'd never heard of Margaret Anderson before. I sure have heard of a LOT of her friends and contemporaries though! There is so much name dropping in this book that even with the cast of characters in the front, it got a little exhausting. I appreciated, so much, what she was trying to do while living during a time when women were really only expected to show up in particular ways and when freedom of speech depended solely on one slim perspective of what was acceptable. As she got older and it was just lots of moving around and being with different partners before more moving around some more with other different partners. I learned a lot but I was also kinda bored.

































