"A patron saint of exquisite verbosity, James made a career examining the clash of American innocence with European cunning. Here are his best works."
An American expatriate who spent his adulthood in England, James (1843-1916) was the patron saint of exquisite verbosity; of circuitous, compulsively sub-claused sentences that contain all the twists and adventures his story lines lack. Reading the prodigious body of fiction he produced over four decades, between 1871 and 1911, you get the sense he lost himself so deeply in his recurrent themes — the innocence of America versus the experience and depravity of Europe, the psychological richness of everyday life — that he couldn’t help carrying on... nyt
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Sunday, December 24, 2023
The Essential Henry James
You don't expect to find Henry James featured on the front page of the digital edition of the New York Times on Christmas Eve. That's fine, but now I'd like equal time for his less "compulsively sub-claused" and less shallow older brother--here given only cursory notice. I won't hold my breath.
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