Moise and the World of Reason Author:Tennessee Williams At the center of Moise and the World of Reason is the need of three people for each other: Moise, an impoverished and quixotic young painter with a gift for unfinished canvases; the narrator, a young man from Thelma, Alabama, who is determinied to be a distinguished writer; and Lance, the man whose intensity, strength and sensua... more »lity held them all togther while he lived, and whose absence gives the novel its strange and haunting power and pathos.
For the subject of Tennessee Williams’ novel is the need for love—a need which Lance once filled in the narrator and his new lover does not, and which Moise’s never entirely fills for her. It is this need that propels them through a long and restless night in Greenwich Village—a night in which Moise gives a party to announce her retirement from “the world of reason”; in which the narrator loses his roommate, the “second love of his life”; and in which a lifetime of experience, hope, the loss of innocence and the rekindling of desire is exposed in a series of scenes and encounters so dramatic, moving and precise that only Tennessee Williams could have written them.« less