MAY SARTON
Dear Juliette
Letters of May Sarton to Juliette Huxley
Edited by Susan Sherman
In these extraordinary letters, we see May Sarton in all her complexities
and are privy to her tangled relationship with Juliette Huxley, whom May
considered her muse and the greatest love of her life.
May Sarton's love for Juliette Huxley, ignited that first moment she saw her
in 1936, transcended sixty years of friendship, passion, rejection, silence,
and reconciliation. The letters chart their meeting, May's affair with
Juliette's husband Julian (brother of Aldous Huxley) before the war, her
intense involvement with Juliette after the war, and the rich, ardent
friendship that endured until Juliette's death. While May's intimate
relationship with Julian was not a secret, May's more powerful romance with
Juliette was.
May's fiery passion was a seductive yet sometimes destructive force. Her
feelings for and demands on Juliette were often overwhelming to them both.
In fact, Juliette refused all contact with May for nearly twenty-five years.
Their reconciliation, after Julian's death, wasn't so much a rekindling as
it was a testament to the profound affinity between them. Theirs was a
relationship rife with complications and misunderstandings but the deep love
and compassion they shared for one another prevailed. Included in this book
are Sarton's original drafts of an introduction to these letters.
- Foreword by Francis Huxley
Susan Sherman, a close friend of May Sarton's during her late years, is editor of May Sarton: Among the Usual Days, A Portrait and May Sarton: Selected Letters 1916-1954. Sherman lives and teaches English in New York City.
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