![]() ![]() ![]() Catherine Tekakwitha, who are you Are you (1656-1680) Is that enough Are you the Iroquois Virgin. Not just an extremely funny novel, but an incredibly original and explicit examination of friendship, sex and spirituality. Notable lines from Leonard Cohens Beautiful Losers. The extraordinary and inimitable singer-songwriter’s classic novel, this is Leonard Cohen’s most critically acclaimed literary work, echoing the dark poetry and wry humour of his timeless songs of loss, love, sex and religion. The complexities of this three-way love, pain and lust are sent spiralling by the death of Edith and ‘F’ at the novel’s start, leading the damaged narrator to question the nature of love, sexuality and spirituality in a series of explicit flashbacks. She was born in Ossernenon, on the south side of the Mohawk River near present-day Auriesville, New York. Revolving around four central – and intrinsically flawed – characters, ‘Beautiful Losers’ is the frank and humorous story of a nameless narrator, his wife Edith, their domineering friend and mentor ‘F’ and Catherine Tekakwitha, a mythic 17th-century Mohawk virgin saint. 1656-1680 The Lily of the Mohawks Kateri Tekakwitha was born in 1656 to a Mohawk chief and a Christian Algonquin woman who had been captured in a raid and assimilated into the Mohawk people. ![]() One of the best-known experimental novels of the 1960s, this uninhibited tale centres on the hapless members of a love triangle, and their sexual obsession and shared fascination with a mythic saint. ![]()
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