Gertrude Stein was a modern American writer
@Novelists, Career and Childhood
Gertrude Stein was a modern American writer
Gertrude Stein born at
She realized that she was a lesbian while studying medicine at Hopkins. She met her life partner Alice B. Toklas in 1907, on Toklas' first day in Paris, at her brother, Michael’s apartment.
Stein died from stomach cancer in Neuilly-sur-Seine and was interred in Paris in P�re Lachaise Cemetery. Carl Van Vechten her literary executor, helped to publish all her unpublished works after her death.
From Ayn Rand's working notes for her novel ‘The Fountainhead’, it is clear that the character Lois Cook in that book was intended as a caricature of Stein.
Gertrude Stein, the youngest of five children, was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania to Jewish parents, Daniel, a wealthy businessman, and Amelia Stein.
When she was three years old, her family moved to Vienna and Paris and returned to America in 1878. They settled in Oakland, California, where she attended First Hebrew Congregation of Oakland's Sabbath school.
In 1892, after the death of her parents, she went to live with her mother’s sister, Fanny, in Baltimore. Here, she met the Cone sisters, Claribel and Ettaa, connoisseurs of modern French art.
She attended Radcliffe College, from 1893 to 1897 and was a student of psychologist William James under whose supervision Stein and fellow student, Leon Mendez Solomons, performed experiments on normal motor automatism
Encouraged by James, she reluctantly joined Johns Hopkins Medical School, where she became infatuated with Mary Bookstaver who was already in a lesbian relationship. Unhappy and demoralized, she left the course midway.
In 1903, she relocated to Paris with her brother Leo hoping to pursue an art career. Their residence had an adjacent studio where here they accumulated the works of art into a significant collection.
Every Saturday, her residence hosted talents in modern literature and art, like Pablo Picasso, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis, James Joyce, Ezra Pound, Thornton Wilder, Sherwood Anderson and Henri Matisse.
She completed ‘Q.E.D.’ in 1903 but was suppressed by the author until it was published in 1950 as ‘Things as They’. The story is based on the lesbian triangular love that happened at John Hopkins.
In 1904, Stein began ‘Fernhurst’, a fictional account of a scandalous three-person romantic affair involving a dean, Carey Thomas, a faculty member, Mary Gwinn, and a Harvard graduate, Alfred Hodder.
By early 1906, Leo and Gertrude Stein's studio had many paintings by Henri Manguin, Pierre Bonnard, Pablo Picasso, Paul Cezanne, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Honore Daumier, Henri Matisse, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec and Gauguin.
Her novel, ‘The Making of Americans’, traces the genealogy, history, and psychological development of members of two fictional families. Though she had finished writing this book much earlier, it was published only in 1925.
‘The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas’, published in 1933, has seven chapters that cover the first three decades of the last century. Its real subject is Stein herself and not her friend Alice.