The Portable Henry James
Henry James - Author
John Auchard - Editor
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Henry James wrote with an imperial elegance of style, whether his subjects were American innocents or European sophisticates, incandescent women or their vigorous suitors. His omniscient eye took in the surfaces of cities, the nuances of speech, dress, and manner, and, above all, the microscopic interactions, hesitancies, betrayals, and self-betrayals that are the true substance of relationships. The entirely new Portable Henry James provides an unparalleled range of this great body of work: seven major tales, including Daisy Miller, The Turn of the Screw, "The Beast in the Jungle," and "The Jolly Corner"; a sampling of revisions James made to some of his most famous work; travel writing; literary criticism; correspondences; autobiography; descriptions of the major novels; and parodies by famous contemporaries, including T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, and Graham Greene.
Chronology Acknowledgments
I. Fiction
Daisy Miller: A Study
The Turn of the Screw
II. Revisions
Daisy Miller: 1879 and 1909
The Portrait of a Lady: 1881 and 1908
III. Travel
From English Hours
From Italian Hours
From The American Scene
from "Boston"
IV. Criticism
On Whitman
On Baudelaire
From Hawthorne
On Emerson
"The Art of Fiction"
From "the Question of Our Speech"
From "The Lesson of Balzac"
On Shakespeare
From the Preface to Roderick Hudson
From the Preface to The Portrait of a Lady
From the Preface to The Tragic Muse
V. Autobiography
The peaches d'antan
The dancing teacher Madame Dubreil
A daguerreotype taken by Mathew Brady
The Galerie d'Apollon
An obscure hurt
The death of Minnie Temple
At the grave of Alice James
VI. Correspondence
A thirteen-year-old in Paris writes to a young friend
On the Grand Tour
Henry James, expatriate
The literary scene in Paris
Growing fame
The friendship with Robert Louis Stevenson
The death of Alice James
The friendship with Hendrik C. Andersen
The death of William James
The publication of Boon, and the break with H. G. Wells
VII. Definition and Description
An American encounters some aristocrats
An ambitious young Frenchwoman
Sarah Bernhardt, the muse of the newspaper
An American education
An American is corrected on what constitutes "the self"
An absolutely unmarried woman
Philistine decor
The really rich
New York identity
A Venetian majordomo
Like a scene from a Maeterlinck play
A private thought
The seduction of Europe
A femme du monde
An intimate recollection of a beautiful woman
Colossal immodesty
The individual Jew
New York City Hall
The absence of penetralia
New York Power
American teeth
A young priest apart from the Roman carnival
VIII. Names
IX. Parody
Frank Moore Colby
Max Beerbohm
X. Legacy
W.H. Auden
Joseph Conrad
T.S. Eliot
Graham Greene
Ezra Pound
Edith Wharton
Virginia Woolf
Suggestions for Further Reading
Selected Bibliography |


