The turn of the screw

authoritative text, contexts, criticism

271 pages

English language

Published Jan. 16, 1999 by W.W. Norton.

ISBN:
978-0-393-95904-8
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OCLC Number:
40043490

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Presents the nineteenth-century short story in which a governess believes her two charges, ten-year-old Miles and eight-year-old Flora, are being haunted by the ghosts of former servants, and includes notes, a history of the novel, selections from James' letters and other writings, and critical essays.

10 editions

Listen to the opera instead.

At the heart of this book, there's a good, simple ghost story in a creepy setting. It would work well as a short story, and Myfanwy Piper did a great job distilling that short story back out for the libretto of Britten's opera version. But the original text is so heavily larded with too many words--too many adjectives, just too much in general--as to ruin it for me. Some of this is the sheer wordiness, some is how slowly the story is drawn out, which was probably an artefact of having originally been published as a serial. But some is also how heavily the protagonist feels the need to imbue every step with Drama, to the point that when the ending comes it has no impact whatsoever because the piece has been blaring at fortississimo for an hour.

Seriously, the opera is a so much better telling of the …

Review of 'The turn of the screw' on 'Goodreads'

An incredible blend of Gothic and Realism, "Turn of the Screw" sends the reader into a tailspin, questioning what is real and what is moral.

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Subjects

  • James, Henry, 1843-1916
  • Governesses -- Fiction
  • Governesses in literature
  • Children -- Fiction
  • England -- Fiction