Jumat, 18 Oktober 2013

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), By Henry James. The established technology, nowadays assist everything the human demands. It consists of the daily tasks, jobs, office, entertainment, as well as a lot more. Among them is the terrific internet connection as well as computer system. This problem will certainly relieve you to support one of your hobbies, checking out behavior. So, do you have going to review this publication The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), By Henry James now?

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James



The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

Download Ebook PDF The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

A Complex Look at Marriage and Adultery by Henry James

“My idea is this, that when you only love a little you’re naturally not jealous-or are only jealous also a little, so that it doesn’t matter. But when you love in a deeper and intenser way, then you’re in the very same proportion jealous; your jealousy has intensity and, no doubt, ferocity. When however you love in the most abysmal and unutterable way of all – whey then you’re beyond everything, and nothing can pull you down.” ― Henry James, The Golden Bowl

In The Golden Bowl by Henry James, two couples lives are intertwined in family and marital bonds. The Golden Bowl has been adapted into a BBC miniseries and a Merchant Ivory film. This Xist Classics edition has been professionally formatted for e-readers with a linked table of contents. This ebook also contains a bonus book club leadership guide and discussion questions. We hope you’ll share this book with your friends, neighbors and colleagues and can’t wait to hear what you have to say about it.

Xist Publishing is a digital-first publisher. Xist Publishing creates books for the touchscreen generation and is dedicated to helping everyone develop a lifetime love of reading, no matter what form it takes

  • Get your next Xist Classic title for Kindle here: http://amzn.to/1A7cKKl
  • Find all our our books for Kindle here: http://amzn.to/1PooxLl
  • Sign up for the Xist Publishing Newsletter here.

Find more great titles on our website.

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #881981 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-08
  • Released on: 2015-06-08
  • Format: Kindle eBook
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

Review Novel by Henry James, published in 1904. Wealthy American widower Adam Verver and his daughter Maggie live in Europe, where they collect art and relish each other's company. Through the efforts of the manipulative Fanny Assingham, Maggie becomes engaged to Amerigo, an Italian prince in reduced circumstances, but remains blind to his rekindled affair with her longtime friend Charlotte Stant. Maggie and Amerigo marry, and later, after Charlotte and Adam have also wed, both spouses learn of the ongoing affair, though neither seeks a confrontation. Not until Maggie buys the gilded crystal bowl of the title as a birthday present for Adam does truth crack the veneer of propriety. -- The Merriam-Webster Encyclopedia of Literature

Review "It is well written, the introduction useful, and the paperback price makes it acceptable for students."--Edna L Steeves, Univ. of Rhode Island

From the Inside Flap Introduction by Denis Donoghue


The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

Where to Download The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

Most helpful customer reviews

72 of 73 people found the following review helpful. A crucial book at a crossroads in American letters, 1905 By A Customer By Ilan MochariSandwiched in American literary time between The Scarlet Letter and The Great Gatsby, The Golden Bowl is plainly influenced by the former and an influence on the latter. In all three books, the plot hinges on an act of adultery. More importantly, in all three books, the act of adultery is never explicitly narrated to us. We learn somehow that the infidelity has occurred, and judge the subsequent behavior of characters in light of the infidelity. There is a tendency in book reviews and literature classes to "boil down" complex works of art into manageable chunks. Suffice it here to say that The Golden Bowl resists reduction marvelously. It's Henry James at his finest, refusing to sugarcoat "love" as an innocent pastime and blessing us with brilliant characters who fully analyze their sophisticated insecurities. Book one (of two) opens with its protagonist, Amerigo, in deep reflection about his imminent marriage to the wealthy Maggie Verver. Why exactly does a rich American beauty who could have whatever man she wants purport to love a penniless, defrocked Italian "Prince?"Make no mistake: The Golden Bowl is not light reading, and any reader who treats it as such will find him or herself backing up and rereading each sentence to capture what was lost. You can't speed through the book, looking for what "happens." You won't find it. Or at least, Henry James won't tell you straight out. James challenges the reader with the onus of judgment. Is your husband having an affair? Chances are that, rather than ask him straight out, you'll beat around the bush and judge whether he is or not by his behavior. No one conveys such tacit social jousting quite like Henry James, and in The Golden Bowl the old master is in peak form. Divided into two books, The Golden Bowl provides a neatly segmented picture of life for a romantic couple both before (Book 1) and after (Book 2) an adultery takes place. Now the book's narrator never actually reveals that Maggie Verver, the second book's protagonist, is "on" to her husband's faithless behavior. Instead, it's something the reader must gather through subtle, nuanced shifts in the comportment and dialogue of the involved characters. One can even make a cogent argument -- based strictly on textual evidence -- that no affair has taken place. The canonical beauty of the book is as much in its narrative style -- one of implicit revelation rather than an omniscient chronicling of events -- as it is in the actual storyline. Where Henry James has evolved from his "Portrait of a Lady" days is in the delivery of the tale. It is as though he is saying, here in his final novel (1905), "Any author worth a grain of salt can give you a straightforward, nineteenth century plot. Here is a different, more elevated manner of story-telling that departs dramatically from anything I've done before." What we get is a work that straddles artistic boundaries, anticipating the oblique narratives of American modernism while subverting the 'and then...' style typical of the previous century's bildungsromans. On top of that, The Golden Bowl is a character-driven masterpiece, whose six characters possess distinguished Shakespearean personalites -- they are hilariously eloquent and fiercely intelligent. But that's de rigeur for a James opus. The whole book, in form and content, shines with what Harold Bloom calls James' "aesthetic eminence" -- stunning turns of phrase that you wish were yours, along with a deft narrative cadence that seamlessly unites scene upon scene into a layered and cohesive whole. The crown jewel in James' vaunted career, The Golden Bowl is a journey in American letters that no accomplished reader should fail to make.

44 of 46 people found the following review helpful. James' finest, in my opinion... By A Customer How does one choose between Henry James novels? Can one really put the feminine insight of The Portrait of a Lady above the moral conflict of The Wings of the Dove? I loved both those novels, and thought that The Ambassadors was quite good as well. But The Golden Bowl, for me, was another experience altogether.First of all, I found "Bowl" to be the most difficult of James' novels to read. Actually, it was one of the most difficult books I have ever read, period. One must reread many passages to make sure they have the right meaning because the prose is so austere and almost impenetrable. But, once you get to the conclusion, it's more than worth it. You have to stick with this novel right to the end in order to fully appreciate its brilliance. The characters are realized with an intelligence that is rare to find in literature today, and they are written about in such a wonderfully restrained and subtle way. Don't miss this literary triumph, and please don't shy away from it because it is considered a "classic" or because of your possible misconceptions of Henry James.Also, I read that it is being developed for an upcoming film version by Merchant Ivory. If that's true, then moviegoers are in for a treat!

38 of 40 people found the following review helpful. A masterpiece and its betrayal By Richard Crowder I discovered James in college and read all his full-length novels before reaching age 30. The only one I had real trouble with was The Golden Bowl.I recently reread the novel and reveled in its elegant complexity. (It would be nice to think that the passage of 20 years has brought wisdom and insight that made me a better reader, but the credit belongs to Dorothea Krook's illuminating discussion in The Ordeal of Consciousness in Henry James.)The Golden Bowl is the last, the most demanding, and the most rewarding of James's major novels. Even its immediate predecessors, The Ambassadors and The Wings of the Dove, do not reach its deep examination of the mixed motives, the tangled good and evil, that drive human action and passion. Although he presents his characters' acts and much of what goes on in their heads, James manages in such a way that while Krook believes Adam and Maggie are on the side of the angels, Gore Vidal (who introduces the current Penguin edition) believes they are monsters of manipulation--and (as Krook acknowledges) both views are consistent with the evidence.Much--too much--of these riches of doubt and ambiguity is lost in the Merchant/Ivory/Jhabvala translation to the screen (2001). The movie has some good things, but it could have had many more. Surprised by extraneous material (like the exotic dance), heavy-handed symbolism (the exterior darkness on the day Charlotte and Amerigo find the golden bowl), and needless oversimplifications (Amerigo's talk of "dishonor" to Charlotte, which exaggerates his virtue and his desire to be done with her), I got the sense that nobody involved in the production had read the novel with the care that it requires and rewards. Had they done so, their version could have been really fine--both as a movie and as an invitation to the novel.

See all 37 customer reviews... The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James


The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James PDF
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James iBooks
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James ePub
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James rtf
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James AZW
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James Kindle

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James
The Golden Bowl (Xist Classics), by Henry James

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar