Henry and June

Henry and June: From the Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin (full title Henry and June: From A Journal of Love: the Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin 19311932) is a 1986 book that is based upon material excerpted from the unpublished diaries of Anaïs Nin.[1] It corresponds temporally to the first volume of Nin's published diaries, written between October 1931 and October 1932, yet is radically different, in that that book begins with a description of the landscape of and around her home and never mentions her husband, whereas Henry and June begins with discussion of Nin's sex life and is full of her struggles and passionate relationship with husband Hugo, and then, as the novel/memoir progresses, other lovers.

Henry and June: From the Unexpurgated Diary of Anaïs Nin
First edition
AuthorAnaïs Nin
LanguageEnglish
GenreMemoir, Diary
PublisherHarcourt Brace Jovanovich
Publication date
1986
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
ISBN978-0-15-140003-4
OCLC13333571
818/.5203 B 19
LC ClassPS3527.I865 Z4642 1986

This, the first of currently five volumes of unexpurgated diaries, concentrates on her passionate involvement with the writer Henry Miller and his wife June Miller.

Nin's source material—her diaries—was able to spawn two dramatically different narratives about the same time period, both widely read and praised. The expurgated diary reveals Nin the philosopher and amateur but astute psychologist. The unexpurgated diary reveals a woman breaking out into wild sexual discovery. It is introduced by her second—bigamous—husband. A film based on the book was released in 1990.[2]

Plot

At the end of 1931, Nin finds herself dissatisfied with being a timid, faithful wife to her banker husband, Hugh Parker Guiler. Nin and her husband contemplate the possibility of opening their relationship, and determine that it would threaten their marriage. However, when Anais meets June Miller, she is magnetically drawn to her and perceives June to be the most beautiful and charismatic woman she has ever met. Nin pursues an extremely intense, ambiguous, sexually charged friendship with her. When June leaves, Nin becomes involved with Henry, and begins an uninhibited sexual and emotional affair with him, which prompts an intellectual and sensual awakening. A friendship is formed between the two that was maintained throughout both artist's lives.

Adaptations

The book was later filmed as Henry & June directed by Philip Kaufman, with Fred Ward as Henry, Uma Thurman as June, and Maria de Medeiros as Anaïs Nin. The movie, released in 1990, is notable as the first film to be released in the United States with an NC-17 rating.

The same year the book was also adapted into a film as The Room of Words (La stanza delle parole),[3] a low-budget Italian production directed by Franco Molé.

gollark: Humans do have dead cells at the top of skin or something to partly block UV light, but I have no idea how effective that is.
gollark: Yes, probably.
gollark: UV should probably damage the DNA in viruses.
gollark: Viral marketing, taken to the next level.
gollark: Nobody able to engineer viruses somehow seems to have any particular motive to do this, sooo...

References

  1. Morrison, Ewan (24 June 2009). "Top 10 literary ménages à trois". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-04-14 via www.theguardian.com.
  2. Doyle, Sady (7 April 2015). "Before Lena Dunham, there was Anaïs Nin – now patron saint of social media". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-04-14 via www.theguardian.com.
  3. La stanza delle parole via www.imdb.com
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