The oddest book you may ever read, both fantastic autobiography and
ground-breaking autofiction
Count Nicolas de Toulouse Lautrec de Savine was a hero in battle and a
legendary lover in bed. A daring adventurer and a shameless swindler. A
gambler ready to place the riskiest bets and a coward apt to flee his
creditors in the middle of the night. Tsar of Bulgaria and a Chicago
streetcar conductor. A racist, a chauvinist, and an antisemite. Was he
all of these--or none of them? This is the question Stella Benson
struggled with as she tried to shape the Count's wild recollections into
a coherent story. Which mattered more: the factual truth or the
fictional truth? Her answer anticipates today's field of creative
nonfiction--while telling a wild, funny, and unique tale.
Literary Nonfiction. Autofiction.