Canadian-born memoirist Mary MacLane broke significant literary ground in the early twentieth century with her disarmingly frank and candid autobiographical writing. In this volume, MacLane probes her relationship with a young woman she calls Annabel Lee. Considering their passionate bond from many different angles, MacLane delves deeply into the mysterious magnetism of her enchanting companion.
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0Table of contents
- MY FRIEND ANNABEL LEE
- Contents
- I - The Coming of Annabel Lee
- II - The Flat Surfaces of Things
- III - My Friend Annabel Lee
- IV - Boston
- V - A Small House in the Country
- VI - The Half-Conscious Soul
- VII - The Young-Books of Trowbridge
- VIII - "Give Me Three Grains of Corn, Mother!"
- IX - Relative
- X - Minnie Maddern Fiske
- XI - Like a Stone Wall
- XII - To Fall in Love
- XIII - When I Went to the Butte High School
- XIV - "And Mary Maclane and Me"
- XV - A Story of Spoon-Bills
- XVI - A Measure of Sorrow
- XVII - A Lute with No Strings
- XVIII - Another Vision of My Friend Annabel Lee
- XIX - The Art of Contemplation
- XX - Concerning Little Willy Kaatenstein
- XXI - A Bond of Sympathy
- XXII - The Message of a Tender Soul
- XXIII - Me to My Friend Annabel Lee
- XXIV - My Friend Annabel Lee to Me
- XXV - The Golden Ripple
