A detailed look into the friendship and professional
network of a group of significant modern American
women writers
Mosaic of Fire examines the personal and artistic
interactions of four innovative American
modernist women writers—Lola Ridge, Evelyn
Scott, Charlotte Wilder, and Kay Boyle—all active
in the Greenwich Village cultural milieu of the first
half of the twentieth century. Caroline Maun traces
the mutually constructive, mentoring relationships
through which these writers fostered each other's
artistic endeavors and highlights the ways in which
their lives and works illustrate issues common to
women writers of the modernist era.
The feminist vision of poet-activist and editor Lola
Ridge led her to form friendships with women writers
of considerable talent, influencing this circle with
the aesthetic and feminist principles outlined in her
1919 lecture, "Woman and the Creative Will." Ridge
first encountered the work of Evelyn Scott when she
accepted several of Scott's poems for publication in
Others, and wrote a favorable review of her novel The
Narrow House. Ridge also took notice of novice writer
Kay Boyle shortly after Boyle's arrival in New York,
hiring Boyle as an assistant at Broom. Almost a decade
later, Scott introduced poet Charlotte Wilder to
Ridge, inaugurating a sustaining friendship between
the two.
Mosaic of Fire examines how each of these writers
was energized by the aesthetic innovations that
characterized the modernist period and how each was
also attentive to her writing as a method to encourage
social change. Maun maps the ebb and flow of their
friendships and careers, documenting the sometimes
unequal nature of support and affection across this
group of talented women artists.
Caroline Maun is an associate professor in the
Department of English at Wayne State University in
Detroit. She is the editor of The Collected Poems of
Evelyn Scott.
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