A review by actualspinster
The Woman of the Wolf and Other Stories by Karla Jay, Renée Vivien, Yvonne M. Klein

2.5

this was an interesting collection but i didnt really ~like it.... but as a sapphic paris enthusiast i did enjoy learning more about [and finally being able to read] renée vivien. i did think karla jay's intro to the collection was pretty trite especially in its attempts to mold viven into a feminist icon... like she's cool and all bc she's gay but like she's a complicated an sometimes gross figure & i dont want to look up to her, i dont need to look up to her to find her work + life interesting. and jay also calls the racism of vivien within these stories [reader, there is lots of racism (especially anti-native racism i would say?)!!!] "unwitting/unconcious" which is like laughable at best lol. i mean im pretty sure there is a lot of work around the connection between the way that those who identified w 'inversion'/sexological discourses of the time around queerness and deep anti-blackness & racism in how they even conceptualise & represent dissident sexuality.... and i think you can absolutely find the beginnings of that in vivien's work too..
most of the stories are rly short which is good or bad depending on the story! i think my faves were the friendship of women (<-- made me cry bc of naomi + ruth), prince charming & the sisters of silence (<-- silent queer nuns :))))

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