
I Love You More Than Most: Thirteen Unique Literary Encounters
by (france) Anna Beaucaire Et Al.
About This Novel
The literary world is not only filled with backstabbing, calculations and insults, but also warmth, tacit understanding and bonds. The words "I love you" or "I love you" were said by Turgenev to Tolstoy, George Sand to Flaubert, René Charles to Eluard, Kerouac to Ginsberg. The octogenarian Goethe still kept Schiller's skull in his study; Wordsworth was the "know thyself" oracle to Coleridge, proving that he was not a poet; for Mansfield and Woolf, there was a kind of jealousy that was the opposite of infatuation and admiration; and Mishima Yukio, Kawabata Yasunari held him in the palm of his hand. The "Hand of God" in the heart; Senghor and Césaire were determined to fight to promote the black spirit... These stories between writers are both beautiful and sad: beautiful because they started from accidents and confirmed the power of love and friendship; sad because they all ended in "extreme neglect"...
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