{"title": "Nightwood", "covers": [378251, 1286013, 376464, 3885176], "key": "/works/OL505583W", "authors": [{"author": {"key": "/authors/OL33580A"}, "type": {"key": "/type/author_role"}}], "type": {"key": "/type/work"}, "subjects": ["Fiction", "Lesbians", "Lesbians in literature", "Sex addicts", "Textual Criticism", "open_syllabus_project", "Paris (france), fiction", "American fiction (fictional works by one author)", "Fiction, psychological", "Lesbians, fiction", "New York Times reviewed", "Barnes, djuna, 1892-1982", "Cross-dressers", "Expatriates", "Americans", "Fiction in English", "Lesbian", "Sex addiction", "LGBTQ fiction before Stonewall"], "subject_people": ["Djuna Barnes"], "links": [{"title": "New York Times review", "url": "http://www.nytimes.com/1995/11/26/books/so-much-genius-so-little-talent.html", "type": {"key": "/type/link"}}], "subject_places": ["Paris (France)", "Paris", "France"], "description": {"type": "/type/text", "value": "\"At Nightwood's center are the love affairs of Robin Vote - a character based on Barnes's lover, Thelma Wood. Robin marries Felix Volkbein, an eccentric aristocrat, whom she meets in Paris, and whom she abandons years later for the American Nora Flood. But Nora cannot contain Robin, either, and Robin in turn deserts her for the larcenous Jenny Petherbridge.\r\n\r\nRich in irony and symbolism, Nightwood depicts the all-consuming power of erotic obsession in language that twists and turns, drawing the reader into a labyrinth of meaning and revelation. This edition also includes T. S. Eliot's Introduction to the 1937 American edition.\"--BOOK JACKET."}, "latest_revision": 8, "revision": 8, "created": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2009-12-08T03:57:20.491690"}, "last_modified": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2025-08-24T06:50:22.950627"}}