
Overdue Ep 740 - Three Lives, by Gertrude Stein
Feb 2, 2026
A lively dive into Gertrude Stein's debut collection and its three working-class women protagonists. Conversation highlights Stein's repetitive, musical prose and ties to visual art movements. They unpack biographical context, publication struggles, and controversies around race and politics. The hosts rank the stories and debate which narrative experiments succeed or falter.
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Early Modernist Technique
- Gertrude Stein's Three Lives shows early signs of her unique modernist style through repetition and limited vocabulary.
- The book replaces linear narrative with incremental blocks that chronicle relationships rather than dramatic plot arcs.
Stein's Salon And Art Patronage
- Craig recounts Stein's background: born 1874, raised in Oakland, moved to Paris and hosted salons with leading artists.
- He links her art patronage with her later literary prominence and salon culture influence.
Publication By Persuasion
- Three Lives was Stein's first published work but gained attention retrospectively after her later success.
- She initially self-published and circulated copies to prominent writers to build buzz.










