Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage (1915)

Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage (1915)

During a luncheon on the grass at a suitably sylvan in Fontainebleau, Philip Carey, the protagonist Of Human Bondage, suffers a momentary fear that love will pass him by. It does in this instance, but after much hardship and bondage in an unrequited love affair, he is...
John Sloan’s  Arch Conspirators (1917)

John Sloan’s Arch Conspirators (1917)

One January night, John Sloan and a boozy group climbed to the top of Greenwich Village’s Washington Arch. According to Sloan, they toted balloons, candles, food baskets, wine, a pot for boiling water, and the makings of a campfire. Fictionalized or not, No one...
Jack London’s The Valley of the Moon (1913)

Jack London’s The Valley of the Moon (1913)

Picnicking sandwiches and much more food play an important part in the courtship of Billy Roberts, a wagon driver, and Saxon Brown, a laundress, in Jack London’s Valley of the Moon. Intending to propose marriage, Billy and Saxon drive into the hills beyond...
Claude Debussy and his daughter Claude-Emma picnicking (1915c.)

Claude Debussy and his daughter Claude-Emma picnicking (1915c.)

Claude Debussy and his daughter Claude-Emma (about ten years old) sit on a picnic carpet spread on the grass in a park. They are not dressed casually: he wears a summer suit, striped, white shirt with cufflinks, and a bow tie. He stares at wearing a summer dress,...
Theodore Dreiser’s  A Hoosier Holiday (1915)

Theodore Dreiser’s A Hoosier Holiday (1915)

“The Piety And Eggs Of Paterson” is Dreiser’s version of a picnic gone wrong. It’s strategically placed at the start of A Hoosier Holiday because Dreiser meant it as a metaphor for what is to come and how his motor trip from New York to Terre...
Virginia Woolf’s The Voyage Out (1915)

Virginia Woolf’s The Voyage Out (1915)

Woolf’s picnic on the summit of Monte Rosa, a fictional place in South America, is the high point (pun intended) of The Voyage Out (1915). Journeying on donkeys walking in a single file, the narrator creates the image of “a jointed caterpillar, tufted with...
Frederick Henry Townsend’s Zeppelin Picnic (1915)

Frederick Henry Townsend’s Zeppelin Picnic (1915)

Even after zeppelin attacks on London in May and June, Brits are undeterred and cannot refrain from picnicking even under the threat of being gassed. Acid satire by F.H. Townsend. Featured Image: Even under threat of attack, Upper-class Brits cannot refrain from...
Norman Douglas’s Old Calabria (1915)

Norman Douglas’s Old Calabria (1915)

Douglas’s advice to his friend, Elizabeth David, set her path to becoming a food writer while walking and picnicking in the hills above Antibes in 1940. Known as a great exaggerator, Douglas describes a mountain festival as a picnic. In his travelogue in Old...
Joseph Leyendecker’s Fourth of July Picnic (1915)

Joseph Leyendecker’s Fourth of July Picnic (1915)

Leyendecker’s cover for The Saturday Evening Post portrays Main Street America, and it’s meant to be good fun. It’s a ‘typical” evocation * of a family on the way to a Fourth of July Picnic (1915). Mom carries a child waving a flag, Dad,...