"He has an evening suit, but never an occasion to wear it, so he puts
it on when he paints his pictures."
Insel, the only novel by the surrealist master Mina Loy, is a book
like no other--about an impossible friendship amid the glamorous
artistic bohemia of 1930s Paris.
German painter Insel is a perpetual sponger and outsider--prone to
writing elegant notes with messages like "Am starving to death except
for a miracle--three o'clock Tuesday afternoon will be the end"--but
somehow writer and art dealer Mrs. Jones likes him.
Together, they sit in cafés, hatch grand plans, and share their artistic
aspirations and disappointments. And they become friends. But as they
grow ever closer, Mrs. Jones begins to realize just how powerful Insel's
hold over her is.
Unpublished during Loy's lifetime, Insel--which is loosely based on
her friendship with the painter Richard Oelze--is a supremely
surrealist, deliberately excessive creation: baroque in style, yet full
of deft comedy and sympathy. Now, with an alternate ending only recently
unearthed in the Loy archives, Insel is finally back in print, and
Loy's extraordinary achievement can be appreciated by a new generation
of readers.