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CHRONOLOGY

1903Anaïs Nin is born in Neuilly, France to the Spanish/Cuban pianist and composer Joaquín Nin y Castellanos and French/Danish/Cuban Rosa Culmell, a singer from a wealthy family
1905Brother Thorvald is born in Havana
1908Second brother Joaquín is born in Berlin
1912Nearly dies from burst appendix in Brussels
1913Nin’s father abandons his family for a young lover; Nin’s mother Rosa and the children stay with Joaquín Sr.’s parents in Barcelona
1914Nin, her mother and two brothers come to New York; Nin begins her diary, in French
1919Nin leaves school at the end of her junior year; becomes increasingly skeptical of Catholicism
1920Begins to write her diary in English
1922Becomes an artists’ model to help with the family income
1923Marries Hugh P. Guiler, a banker, in Cuba
1924Nin and Guiler move to Paris where he takes a position with the Paris branch of his New York bank; Nin continues her diary and dabbles in fiction
1927Begins Spanish dance lessons with Paco Miralles
1929Has an unconsummated affair with American author and scholar John Erskine, which haunts her for years
1930Moves from a lavish Paris apartment to a more economical house in Louveciennes, a suburb of Paris
1931Meets controversial American novelist Henry Miller in Louveciennes
1932Becomes Miller’s lover and is infatuated with his wife June; Edward Titus publishes Nin’s first book, D. H. Lawrence: An Unprofessional Study; Nin begins psychotherapy with René Allendy
1933Reunites with her father and begins an incestuous relationship with him in the south of France, which would last for several months; begins psychoanalysis with Otto Rank
1934Becomes Rank’s lover; has a horrific late-term abortion; comes to New York to help Rank psychoanalyze patients; Miller secretly comes with her
1935Moves from Louveciennes to Paris with Guiler
1936Self-publishes The House of Incest (Siana Editions); meets Peruvian communist Gonzalo Moré and begins a sexual relationship with him; rents a houseboat on the Seine for their trysts
1937Meets Lawrence Durrell; she, Miller and Durrell begin planning a series of books
1939Obelisk Press prints Nin’s The Winter of Artifice; Nin and Guiler fly to New York to avoid oncoming war
1940Nin reunites with her two lovers, Miller and Moré, in New York; begins an affair with the young artist John Dudley
1941Meets the Viennese singer Edward Graeffe (Chinchilito) in Provincetown and begins a long-lasting affair with him
1942Self-publishes the expurgated version of Winter of Artifice (Gemor Press); breaks with Miller; begins psychoanalysis with Martha Jaeger
1943Meets Haitian sculptor Albert Mangones and has a brief affair with him
1944Self-publishes Under a Glass Bell (Gemor Press)
1945Meets seventeen-year-old William Pinckard and begins an affair with him; self-publishes This Hunger (Gemor Press); meets Gore Vidal; begins psychoanalysis with Clement Staff; begins a brief affair with critic Edmund Wilson
1946Falls in love with Vidal; with his help, E. P. Dutton publishes Nin’s Ladders to Fire; briefly resumes affair with Mangones
1947Dutton publishes Children of the Albatross; meets Rupert Pole; breaks with Moré
Trapeze

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