Natalie Clifford Barney was an American playwright, poet and novelist who lived as an expatriate in Paris. Barney’s salon was held at her home at 20 rue Jacob in Paris’s Left Bank for more than 60 years. Her life and love affairs served as inspiration for many novels written by others.
About Natalie Clifford Barney in brief

For more information, visit: www. Smithsonian.com/Barney and www.nataliecliffordbarney.com. For more on the Lost Generation, go to: http://www.lostgeneration.org/lost-gen.html. The Lost Generation is a collection of works by American and British Modernists of the lost generation, published by Simon & Schuster, from 1876-1915. The Last Generation is published by Penguin Books, priced between $20 and $50. For information on The Lostgeneration, visit www.thelostgen.com or go to www.penguin.co.uk/lostgen/lostgeneration/lostgenerations. In her writings she supported feminism and pacifism. In her early twenties she made headlines by galloping through Bar Harbor while driving a second horse on a lead ahead of her, riding astride instead of sidesaddle. Her interest in the French language began with a governess who read Jules Verne stories aloud to her, so she would have to learn quickly to understand them. She and her younger sister Laura attended Les Ruches, a French boarding school in Fontainebleau, France, founded by feminist Marie Souvestre, who also founded Allenswood Academy, in Wimbledon, then outside London, which was attended by such notables as Eleanor Roosevelt. When she was five years old, her family spent the summer at New York’s Long Beach Hotel where Oscar Wilde happened to be speaking on his American lecture tour.
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