The Wings of the Dove (Oxford World's Classics)
|
| List Price: | £8.99 |
| Price: | £8.09 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 11 to 14 days
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
16 new or used available from £0.18
Average customer review:Product Description
Originally published in 1902, a novel which takes passionate love as its central theme and focuses on a young woman with a terminal illness whose last gesture will serve either as a deed of selflessness, or as a final act of revenge. From the author of THE BOSTONIANS, THE ASPERN PAPERS and THE TURN OF THE SCREW.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #533485 in Books
- Published on: 1998-06-18
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 592 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
TBC
Customer Reviews
It's like watching a slow chess game played out.
Make no mistake: this is a major novel. It will take everything you've got and then some to get through it. The plotline is simple: who gets to take advantage of a rich dying girl before the others do? But the novel is not about its plot; it's about its language. And what language! It's like trying to swim upstream against prose badly translated out of a dead tongue. Sentences perpetually delaying conclusions and meanings put the reader in the same position as the characters: trapped in amber struggling to get free from their situations. The prose style becomes an affectation one gets past; it's no harder than adjusting to Shakespeare, and easier than Joyce. The language is the true hero of the book, for there's no one else suitable for the position (Milly seems more object than subject as the novel progresses, and is removed for the last third). The chief interest consists largely of what James is going to do next--which viewpoint to take? which episode to develop? All this said, the book does have punch at the end, as characters play their hands and admit to one another and themselves what they won't do.
Hypnotic
I love Henry James' work, but getting through it is a trial of endurance. Don't try this if you are coming to his work for the first time. Try something shorter like "The Turn of the Screw" which is superb. This is also superb, but is so dense that the language and style takes enormous concentration in order to do the novel full justice. As usual with James' it is not the most cheerful of subject matters and centres around his preoccupation with American naivete struggling to survive in worldly Europe, but it is wonderfully tragic and has some gorgeous characters in it. For the same type of thing on the other side of the ocean try Edith Wharton.
James' Best
In my humble opinion, this is James' best work. It surpasses even "The Ambassadors" and "The Golden Bowl" as well as his more often read, not to say more ubiquitous (since lousy movies from Hollywood seem to have revived interest in the author in a manner he would have found distinctly distasteful), earlier masterpieces, short and long. Shame on The Library of America for stalling out on its republication of James' work before getting to the late achievements. Here is one vote for completion of the canon in the usual estimable LOA volumes.
This is a novel to be savoured and treasured. If you're up to late James (he wrote ghost stories, but he's no Stephen King), read on without hesitation.




