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  <title><![CDATA[Trials of Radclyffe Hall]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[The wealthy, conservative lesbian Radclyffe Hall is remembered now for a single brave act: the publication of her troubling classic <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> (1928), the first novel in English on the theme of &quot;sexual inversion.&quot; It appeared the same year as Virginia Woolf's jeu d'esprit <em>Orlando</em>, which is more or less about Woolf's love of Vita Sackville-West, but the authorities failed to decipher the subversive undertone of Woolf's modernist prose--and it was Hall's blandly realistic novel that was seized and banned. The best yet of Diana Souhami's biographies, <em>The Trials of Radclyffe Hall</em> is an absorbing and irreverent account of Hall's life and work, with emphasis on the stormy reception of <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> and Hall's long relationship with the artist Una Troubridge, &quot;a formidable acolyte, an indispensable servant, even if there was the grip of tentacles about her and the clink of chains.&quot; <em>--Regina Marler</em> ]]></description>
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    <![CDATA[The wealthy, conservative lesbian Radclyffe Hall is remembered now for a single brave act: the publication of her troubling classic <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> (1928), the first novel in English on the theme of &quot;sexual inversion.&quot; It appeared the same year as Virginia Woolf's jeu d'esprit <em>Orlando</em>, which is more or less about Woolf's love of Vita Sackville-West, but the authorities failed to decipher the subversive undertone of Woolf's modernist prose--and it was Hall's blandly realistic novel that was seized and banned. The best yet of Diana Souhami's biographies, <em>The Trials of Radclyffe Hall</em> is an absorbing and irreverent account of Hall's life and work, with emphasis on the stormy reception of <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> and Hall's long relationship with the artist Una Troubridge, &quot;a formidable acolyte, an indispensable servant, even if there was the grip of tentacles about her and the clink of chains.&quot; <em>--Regina Marler</em> ]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[A bit wordy but all and all a really good read. The middle part tends to become a bit stale but the beginning and end of this bio is amazing. All and all, totally rec this one for anyone wanting to learn more about gay and lesbian history.]]></body>
    
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    <body><![CDATA[For about 90% of this book I was enchanted. And I read the last 10% and grew to not like Radclyffe Hall as much as previously. Sad really. ]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[The wealthy, conservative lesbian Radclyffe Hall is remembered now for a single brave act: the publication of her troubling classic <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> (1928), the first novel in English on the theme of &quot;sexual inversion.&quot; It appeared the same year as Virginia Woolf's jeu d'esprit <em>Orlando</em>, which is more or less about Woolf's love of Vita Sackville-West, but the authorities failed to decipher the subversive undertone of Woolf's modernist prose--and it was Hall's blandly realistic novel that was seized and banned. The best yet of Diana Souhami's biographies, <em>The Trials of Radclyffe Hall</em> is an absorbing and irreverent account of Hall's life and work, with emphasis on the stormy reception of <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> and Hall's long relationship with the artist Una Troubridge, &quot;a formidable acolyte, an indispensable servant, even if there was the grip of tentacles about her and the clink of chains.&quot; <em>--Regina Marler</em> ]]>
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    <![CDATA[The wealthy, conservative lesbian Radclyffe Hall is remembered now for a single brave act: the publication of her troubling classic <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> (1928), the first novel in English on the theme of &quot;sexual inversion.&quot; It appeared the same year as Virginia Woolf's jeu d'esprit <em>Orlando</em>, which is more or less about Woolf's love of Vita Sackville-West, but the authorities failed to decipher the subversive undertone of Woolf's modernist prose--and it was Hall's blandly realistic novel that was seized and banned. The best yet of Diana Souhami's biographies, <em>The Trials of Radclyffe Hall</em> is an absorbing and irreverent account of Hall's life and work, with emphasis on the stormy reception of <em>The Well of Loneliness</em> and Hall's long relationship with the artist Una Troubridge, &quot;a formidable acolyte, an indispensable servant, even if there was the grip of tentacles about her and the clink of chains.&quot; <em>--Regina Marler</em> ]]>
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