d  a  v  i  d    t  i  n    m  o  u  t  h
some war writings of gertrude stein

manuscript (150,000 words)
some war writings of gertrude stein 

chapter one, page onesome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page twosome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page threesome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page foursome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page fivesome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page sixsome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page sevensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page eightsome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page ninesome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page tensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page elevensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page twelvesome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page thirteensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page fourteensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page fifteensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page sixteensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page seventeensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page eighteensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page nineteensome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page twentysome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page twenty-onesome war writings of gertrude stein

chapter one, page twenty-twosome war writings of gertrude stein

page twenty-threesome war writings of gertrude stein

page twenty-foursome war writings of gertrude stein

page twenty-five
some war writings of gertrude stein

manuscript (150,000 words)
some war writings of Gertrude Stein is a critical look at the writings Gertrude Stein undertook while in hiding in the French countryside during World War II. it was written by tinny tin tin, a scholarly dog belonging to the writer david tin mouth. tinny tin tin's study strives to place Stein's war writings in the context of her career, but also in the political and social context of the conflagration of war. it touches on Stein's early support of the Vichy régime, but the main focus is to make it possible to read previously inaccessible works like Ida and Mrs. Reynolds, works written in Europe by a major writer, both a lesbian and a Jew, even as the Holocaust was unfolding all around her. The full manuscript is available to publishers for their consideration on request.