The Beautiful Child
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
From the acclaimed author of Pemberley and Thornfield Hall comes a tale inspired by Henry James
The Beautiful Child is the last known unfinished story by the great American writer, ending on a Jamesian note of terror and amplified throughout by Tennant's trademark feminist-dreamlike style. A chilling account of cruelty and neglect, it suggests a terrifying real scandal behind James's inability to complete his story of a couple who beseech a fashionable artist to paint the child they never had—none other than the dipsomaniac Mr. and Mrs. Smith, longstanding servants of James until the novel was abandoned.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This unusual ghost tale is set in present-day Rye, England, where Henry James wrote his late masterpieces. The primary narrator, English professor and James scholar Jan Sunderland, visits Rye over the holidays to discuss a media venture, which he, a self-proclaimed Luddite, is less than enthusiastic about. Things take a turn for the strange when a bookseller arrives with a manuscript that discusses and contains James's unfinished work, "The Beautiful Child." Manuscript excerpts and other diversions from the primary narrator represent intriguing ideas but detract from the atmosphere and suspense, making the climactic events more perplexing than terrifying. Sunderland comes across as unpleasantly judgmental, and while his opinions are clear, his motivations are not. Though the attempt at a ghost story that is both postmodern and Jamesian is admirable, the result is more style than substance, and readers would do better to revisit The Turn of the Screw.