Miss MacIntosh, My Darling discussion
Links, Resources, Interviews, ETC
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Nathan "N.R."
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Dec 05, 2013 12:05PM

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http://home.earthlink.net/~eichfr/pho...
I want to study booksbooksbooks with her! She must have been an a**-kicking prof. Actually, she does remind me of my best-lit=prof-ever prof.

The Brain Pain group ;;
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group...
The BURIED Book Club (Young is a Founding Member) ;;
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Both threads include some worth-while-perusing responses to the difficulties and frustrations of the text. Highly recommended reading, in fact, prior to securing your decision to take on this brick of prose-poetry.

http://www.dalkeyarchive.com/?s=margu...
Specific attention to ::
"A Conversation with Marguerite Young By Ellen G. Friedman and Miriam Fuchs" ;; http://www.dalkeyarchive.com/a-conver...


http://www.wnyc.org/story/207508-marg...
Also, news to me ; a novella was removed from Miss MacIntosh. Will it ever turn up again?

"Love Song for an Author" by Michael Segers ::
http://www.peanut.org/mike/text/Margu...


Only two chapters into my reading, but I've been reading the chapter...and then a second time following along with the audio. I realize that amounts to reading these two volumes twice, but so far it has seemed to work well. At least that is what I am telling myself. ;-)
http://artonair.org/series/marguerite...

Oh yes thank you for highlighting that one. I hadn't looked closely enough to see that ..... they read the entirety of Miss MacIntosh, My Darling. I'll just trot over to the editions thread and link it there too.

I just checked in to artonair.org to read along with Ch 3 (after I had read Ch 3 on my own). The reading is an excerpt from Ch 3...the last 10 pages. I searched and found the next link is for Ch 6.
Sadly, Miss Mac is not read in its entirety in these links...but what is there is excellent.
Note: Ch 1 and Ch 2 readings are available

http://www.wnyc.org/story/207508-marg... ..."
I was tempted to listen to the audio of Ms Young, but decided to exercise self-restraint and wait until I am finished reading "Miss Mac".
However I loved this...
"'All that I have told in this story is true, down to the last butterfly or flower,' claims Marguerite Young in this talk at a 1966 Books and Authors Luncheon.
The author of the just published Miss MacIntosh, My Darling then proceeds to evoke a parade of outlandish personalities and events, all centering upon the utopian communities of New Harmony, Indiana. Millennial cult leaders, visionary labor theorists, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, even the Emperor of Russia, all make appearances in very loose chronological and thematic order until Young suddenly breaks off. Apologizing that she had 'misunderstood the time,' she leaves a confused, if tantalized, audience."
Somewhere in my wandering the halls of the internet this morning I read her statement that women "pay the price" in utopian communities. True.

If I am understanding correctly, Miss Mac was read in its entirety...but only some of it has been "restored" for the AIR archives. I wonder if the un-restored readings are available anywhere.


Wayne McEvilly: Profound heartfelt thanks to @Death Zen for sending this extraordinary image of America's Greatest Writer to me. Ah, Marguerite, your heart held the love of each and every fragment of each and every passing thing, encompassing oceanic vasts not yet discovered in galaxies not yet born, as well as every tender leaf and blade of grass, each and every toiling human being upon this our planet home. I thank you. I thank you. posted October 15, 2013
Edward Swift: I studied with Marguerite Young for 4 years at the New School. She changed my life. We remained friends for many years more. Sometimes we would sit in the Bleecker Playground and sing Scottish Ballads or Baptist hymns. She always told me, "Imagination creates the greatest of all realities." She opened up a world of possibilities for all her students. There has never been anyone like her in my life. To this day I have Miss MacIntosh My Darling on my bedside table and I continue to read it. I have included a long essay about her in my new book, Writing Under the Influence of..... edwardswift43@gmail.com posted March 29, 2014
http://waynemcevilly.blogspot.com/201...

Wayne McEvilly:...on the long correspondence I had with Anais, when we talked of turning our letters into a book her biggest enthusiasm was that we bring attention to the genius of Marguerite Young, and most of all to the great novel published by Scribners in 1965. It was agreed that Marguerite was at the center of our book.
Going through the materials to prepare myself for the task of beginning this work, I came upon this extraordinary document: a Sympathy Card which Marguerite sent to me when her Mother died. The text reads:
"Dearest Wayne My beautiful little fairy tale mother is gone - suddenly - without warning - and I feel that now I must die.
Love,
Marguerite Young"
The re-reading of this and feeling the embossed silver letters "In Deepest Sympathy" evoke a profound sense of, not loss really, but of a poetic nostalgia for all dead loves and all remembered things because nothing of Marguerite will ever be lost, it being inscribed, as she would have said, on memory's whirling disc. All these years later, this stark cry acts as a talisman propelling me forward to define the very center of our book.

http://waynemcevilly.blogspot.com/201...

[Wayne McEvilly] asked Michael Segers to Remember Marguerite Young and he did - beautifully
a beautiful guest post by Michael Segers @msegers
The first night, as I sat in the classroom of the New School, I wondered what I had gotten myself in for. The hallways and classrooms were sterile, institutional, like so many classrooms in which I have tried to teach and tried to learn, but not at all like my Village. Once Marguerite entered, everything changed. Marguerite was even shorter than I am. But, she could fill a room just by being in it. She stood at the door, giving us a sweeping glance, then entered, and sat, not at the desk but on it, her feet dangling. Although I had seen her several times, this was my first chance to look at her closely.
...the rest of his lovely account at...
http://waynemcevilly.blogspot.com/201...

Thanks for this, Ce Ce. Very interesting accounts, and that inscription gives us a little insight into MY's actual life. Interesting that she describes her mother as 'fairy-tale'; Vera in Miss Mac is such a sleeping beauty figure.

http://anaisninblog.skybluepress.com/...
Here is the page the sound link is on...and the background of what Nin & Young are discussing...
http://anaisninblog.skybluepress.com/...

It leaped off the screen at me. Such a gem...it seemed to me a lovely reverberating echo of the voice creating Miss Mac.
Very intriguing your characterization of Vera as a "sleeping beauty figure".

Should you find yourself in the Yale area, perhaps you'd like to visit the Marguerite Young Archive :: http://drs.library.yale.edu/HLTransfo...
"The Marguerite Young Papers document the work of writer Marguerite Young. The papers consist of personal and professional correspondence, drafts of writings, audiovisual material, notebooks, research files, printed material, photographs, artwork, realia, and financial papers spanning the years 1925 to 1999. The bulk of the collection consists of Young's drafts of writings, correspondence, and audiovisual material. Writings include autograph manuscript and typescript drafts, printed versions, notes, and notebooks of her writings, including Angel in the Forest: A Fairy Tale of Two Utopias; Miss Macintosh, My Darling; and Harp Song for a Radical: The Life and Times of Eugene Victor Debs. Correspondence includes letters from friends and colleagues regarding her professional and personal life. Audiovisual material consists of sound recordings and one unidentified film, including the 1974 to 1975 radio production of Miss Macintosh, My Darling read by various authors and actors for WBAI-FM Pacifica Radio. Other papers include photographs, clippings, financial papers, personal papers, personal effects, and realia."
If I understood correctly, there is contained in the archive somewhere the 400 page novella excised from MMMD.

"Homage to Marguerite Young"
http://bibliomanic.com/marguerite-young/


http://clocktower.org/series/margueri...


A Delicate Aggression: Savagery and Survival in the Iowa Writers' Workshop
By David O. Dowling. Reading a few pages available on Google Books!!


Charles Ruas Interviews Marguerite Young http://clocktower.org/radio/player/se...

If you follow a line in an arabesque, you will end up back at your starting point as the pattern continues endlessly. This means the arabesque does not have a definite beginning, middle or end.
What is the literary arabesque? - Future Research Masters
https://futureresearchmasters.com/art...
It is the nature of the arabesque that it should forever be
becoming; fulfilment or completion is always just beyond reach.


To hear the 11 minute conversation between Young and Guiler, click here.
http://anaisninblog.skybluepress.com/...