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Ladders to Fire

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Anaïs Nin’s Ladders to Fire interweaves the stories of several emotionally inhibited women grappling with self-doubt, fear, guilt, and distrust. The novel delves into their inner struggles to break free from these barriers to happiness and wholeness. Drawing from her own experiences documented in her renowned diaries, Nin's intuitive and experimental style transforms personal reflections into fiction. She famously stated, “it was the fiction writer who edited the diary.” The narrative explores the erotic attachments of four young women, framed as a "woman's struggle to understand her own nature." This work initiates a five-volume "continuous novel," Cities of the Interior, which includes Children of the Albatross, The Four-Chambered Heart, A Spy in the House of Love, and Solar Barque. Set in pre-war, expatriate Paris, the novel, which shocked Nin’s contemporaries, is inspired by her confessional diaries. Although Nin found profound self-creation in her diaries, she refrained from revealing them during her lifetime, opting instead for fiction as a means to artistically distill her secret experiences. The 1995 reissue features a new cover and foreword, along with an introduction by Nin scholar Benjamin Franklin V and Gunther Stuhlmann’s classic foreword.

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Ladders to Fire, Anaïs Nin

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Released
1959
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Title
Ladders to Fire
Language
English
Authors
Anaïs Nin
Publisher
Swallow
Released
1959
Format
Paperback
ISBN10
0804001804
ISBN13
9780804001809
Series
Original title
Ladders to fire
Rating
2.75 out of 5
Description
Anaïs Nin’s Ladders to Fire interweaves the stories of several emotionally inhibited women grappling with self-doubt, fear, guilt, and distrust. The novel delves into their inner struggles to break free from these barriers to happiness and wholeness. Drawing from her own experiences documented in her renowned diaries, Nin's intuitive and experimental style transforms personal reflections into fiction. She famously stated, “it was the fiction writer who edited the diary.” The narrative explores the erotic attachments of four young women, framed as a "woman's struggle to understand her own nature." This work initiates a five-volume "continuous novel," Cities of the Interior, which includes Children of the Albatross, The Four-Chambered Heart, A Spy in the House of Love, and Solar Barque. Set in pre-war, expatriate Paris, the novel, which shocked Nin’s contemporaries, is inspired by her confessional diaries. Although Nin found profound self-creation in her diaries, she refrained from revealing them during her lifetime, opting instead for fiction as a means to artistically distill her secret experiences. The 1995 reissue features a new cover and foreword, along with an introduction by Nin scholar Benjamin Franklin V and Gunther Stuhlmann’s classic foreword.