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Mittwoch, 29. November 2017
Mark Twain’s Disturbing Passion for Collecting Young Girls / Linda Simon
In 1905, when seventy-year-old Mark Twain began to collect a bevy of
adolescent girls, whom he called his “angelfish,” he defended his
predilection by insisting that he longed for grandchildren. His own
daughters were grown—his favorite, Susy, was dead by then—and he was
lonely. But grandfathers can have grandsons as well as granddaughters,
and Twain, the creator of one of literature’s most famous adolescents,
surely celebrated boys’ cheeky energy. There was more, then, to his
strange sorority than an elderly man’s yearning for grandchildren, more
even than nostalgia for his daughters’ childhoods. “As for me,” Twain
wrote at the age of seventy-three, “I collect pets: young girls—girls
from ten to sixteen years old; girls who are pretty and sweet and naive
and innocent—dear young creatures to whom life is a perfect joy and to
whom it has brought no wounds, no bitterness, and few tears.” ... [mehr] https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2017/11/28/mark-twains-disturbing-passion-for-collecting-young-girls/
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