Want cheap Books? Compare Book prices before you buy!   
Best Book Price - Cheap UK Books                       
 Enter your new search here:
     
Help FAQ Links
  Books     DVDs     CDs     Games    

The Turn of the Screw: AND The Aspern Papers (Penguin Classics)

By: Henry James
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Classics
ISBN: 0141439904
ISBN-13: 9780141439907
Released: 26 Jun 2003
RRP: £5.99
Average Rating:


Comparing Prices...

Customer Reviews

Terrifying tale - By: Roman Clodia, 27 Jun 2008
Unlike some of the other reviewers here I still think this is the creepiest book I've ever read, & all the more terrifying for the fact that James never articulates what's going on - he simply leaves your imagination to float free & conjure up all your worse nightmares. Yes, he's never an easy read (though this is far more accessible than Wings of the Dove, The Golden Bowl etc) but I think his very stately, mannered sentences & diction actually add to the horror of the story. Don't read this if you're expecting Stephen King or The Exorcist - James expects his readers to make the effort to read properly. Someone called this (possibly James himself?)'the most poisonous little tale I could imagine' & I think that's a perfect description - when I re-read it, it was on the tube with bright lights & lots of people around as I couldn't face reading it at home alone!
A good starting point for Henry James - By: Mister Hobgoblin, 06 Feb 2008
I first became aware of Henry James when Colm Toibin released The Master. After The Master, I would have been happy never to hear of James again - it was a dull, dull book about an apparently dull, dull man. Imagine my ambivalence, then, when I was given a copy of The Aspern Papers & The Turning of the Screw...

But from a sense of duty, I did open the book. And I'm glad I did. Yes, Henry James does write some long & pompous sentences. In The Aspern Papers, these are forgivable since the narrator has to be a bit of a pompous man himself. I thought it worked less wellin Screw, simply because it made the female private tutor seem, somehow, mannish. But where both tales excelled wasin creating suspense & mystery. In Aspern, the suspense centres around a game of cat & mouse to persuade an aged former lover of the poet Jeffrey Aspern to part with her private writings & papers from Aspern; &in Screw it seems to concern the possession of two children by ghosts. In both, though, the eventual outcome is genuinely up for grabs right to the end with twists & turns aplenty.

The leitmotif is of repressed emotion. But unlike the portrayalin The Master, I got the feeling that James understood the whole gamut of human emotion very well. It must have taken a great sense of empathy, both with the characters to understand the emotions being surpressed, & also with the reader to understand how to create a welling feeling of hope, expectation & fear. Henry James seemed very much a man of the world - as he probably had to be, selling his work by installmentsin magazines.

I couldn't help noticing a similarityin style with Sheridan LeFanu, particularlyin the ghostly theme of Screw. LeFanu also wrote a mixture of short stories, tales & novels, many of which had a deepening sense of mystery & forboding. I suspect LeFanu's writing style is often more acessible (i.e. shorter sentences) but there is also a tendency towards Victorian pomposity. The two writers also seemed to share a real need to set the narrator into a context - it was not enough to pitchin with the story, the narrator had to have a reason for telling it. This may seem rather outdated (although Neil Bartlett took it to new heights with Skin Lane this year), but it does have quite a charm to it.

Of the two tales, I much preferred The Aspern Papers, perhaps because it didn't rely on ghosts (although the old lady did claim to be 150) & thus created a surreal but conceivable world. It also seemed to twist more as the narrator found himself variously on the front foot & back foot, but always erring on the side of caution for fear of losing the prize. Screw is, perhaps, a bit more linear. But as an introduction to Henry James - & even one jaded by Toibin's unfortunate tribute - the two tales make an excellent starting point.
Mastery - By: , 23 Mar 2001
Henry James shows himself as the great master of American short fiction (alongside with Hawthorne & Poe). "The Turn of the Screw" is a moving & frightening tale about childhood & its dark side. James makes us aware that childhood is not always that Paradise we have been told. Readin a lonely night will increase your feelings of terror and... "The Aspern Paper" or what would you do to get what you most desire? Editors certainly are people authors, those surrounding authors, should be prevented against. Join a ravishing editor, the lover of a late writer & her simple niece, & you will have another superb example of the narrative possibilities of any topic when written by a great author.

Book Categories

Browse through the categories below:
Antiquarian, Rare & Collectable
Art, Architecture & Photography
Audio CDs
Audio Cassettes
Biography
Business, Finance & Law
Calendars, Diaries, Annuals & More
Children's Books
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Fiction
Food & Drink
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Family & Lifestyle
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Humour
Languages
Mind, Body & Spirit
Music, Stage & Screen
Poetry, Drama & Criticism
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science & Nature
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Scientific, Technical & Medical
Society, Politics & Philosophy
Sports, Hobbies & Games
Study Books
Travel & Holiday
Young Adult
Copyright ©2003-2008 BestBookPrice.co.uk. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of BestBookPrice.co.uk is prohibited.
No warranty either express or implied is made about the accuracy of the information on this site