Drabble, Margaret, editor. The Oxford Companion to English Literature. Sixth edition, Oxford University Press, 2000.
Henry James
-
Standard Name: James, Henry
HJ
(who began publishing in 1871 and continued into the twentieth century) left his native USA to settle in England early in his writing career. Known for his extreme subtlety, verging at times on obscurity, he was hugely influential as a novelist, short-story writer, and critic. His also wrote plays, which, however, were unsuccessful on stage.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Literary responses | Beatrice Harraden | This was BH
' own favourite among her works. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. “Miss Harraden’s New Story”. New York Times, 6 May 1899. |
Literary responses | Rebecca Harding Davis | In her own time RHD
's writing was generally well received. But in a rather negative review of Waiting for the Verdict, Henry James
(the most prominent writer of her generation) not only gave... |
Literary responses | Julia Constance Fletcher | In a scathing review, the Graphic classified the novel as American school of Henry James
and dismissed the characters as self-pitying over wrongs which amounted to nothing at all. Locker, Arthur, editor. “New Novels”. The Graphic, Vol. 22 , No. 576, 11 Dec. 1880, p. 595, https://www.proquest.com/britishperiodicals/docview/1693143486/2D9DCA24942247FDPQ/7?accountid=14474. 595 |
Literary responses | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | Henry James
's review in 1865 considered Braddon's success alongside that of Collins
, pronouncing her the founder of the sensation novel (defined as devising domestic mysteries adapted to the wants of a sternly prosaic... |
Literary responses | Julia Constance Fletcher | The Athenæum thought the Italian stories more tragic, more real and lively. It complained that Fleming (like Henry James
, and oddly when most Americans are so energetic and decisive) chose to write about such... |
Literary responses | Lucas Malet | The Times review found the subject-matter of these stories derivative: now of Henry James
, now of E. M. Forster
, now of unnamed murder-mystery writers.She likes a revolver shot, not for any mystery... |
Literary responses | Louisa May Alcott | In a review of Moods, Henry James
panned LMA
's ignorance of human nature, but did acknowledge a degree of cleverness in the author and a great deal of beauty in the writing. James, Henry. “Review of Moods, 1865”. Critical Essays on Louisa May Alcott, edited by Madeleine B. Stern, G. K. Hall, 1984, pp. 69-73. 73 |
Literary responses | Patricia Highsmith | Critic Bob Wake
discusses Highsmith's complex point-of-view techniques—a literary style begun by Henry James
—and her modelling The Talented Mr Ripley on his novel The Ambassadors (1903). He notes her humorous plays on the James... |
Literary responses | Ruth Prawer Jhabvala | The New York Times called this one of the three collaborators' best films as well as one of the best adaptations of a major literary work ever to come onto the screen. qtd. in Long, Robert Emmet. The Films of Merchant Ivory. Harry N. Abrams, 1991. 137 |
Literary responses | Ruth Prawer Jhabvala | Updike
again complained about RPJ
's refusal of sympathy to her characters. Robert Towers
went further: linking this with Jhabvala's gender and (British) nationality, he accused her of revelling in her characters' discomfiture and degradation... |
Literary responses | Willa Cather | This volume was badly received. Cather sent a copy to Henry James
, whom at this date she much admired. As Tillie Olsen
later pointed out indignantly, he never replied. To an enquiry from a... |
Literary responses | Sara Jeannette Duncan | SJD
sent a copy of this work to Henry James
, who replied: I think your drama lacks a little line—bony structure and palpable, as it were, tense cord—on which to string the pearls of... |
Literary responses | Alice Meynell | This collection moved the Times Literary Supplement to declare that its delicacy—of scrupulousness, balance, fineness, skill—is as rare in life and in art as ever it was. qtd. in Badeni, June. The Slender Tree: A Life of Alice Meynell. Tabb House, 1981. 222-3 |
Literary responses | Anita Brookner | There was some astonishment in the media when this novel won the Booker Prize (although it was up against J. G. Ballard
's Empire of the Sun. The book itself significantly boosted AB
's literary... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Ruth Prawer Jhabvala |
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