欧宝娱乐

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兀賵乇丕賯 兀爻亘賷乇賳

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賲丕 賲賳 卮丕毓乇賺 賷賲賵鬲購 廿賱賻賾丕 賵賷鬲乇賰 賵乇丕亍賻賴 毓卮賷賯丞賸貙 兀賵 丨亘賷亘丞賸貙 兀賵 丕賲乇兀丞賸 賷亘孬購賾賴丕 兀爻乇丕乇賻賴貙 賵賷賵丿毓賴丕 卮匕乇丞賸 賲賳 兀毓賲丕賱賴貙 賵乇爻丕卅賱賴貙 賵賯氐丕卅丿賴.

賮賷 鈥溫Y堌必з� 兀爻賭锃欃娯辟嗏€� 賷亘鬲賰乇 賴賳乇賷 噩賷賲爻 卮禺氐賷丞 丕賱卮丕毓乇 噩賷賮乇賷 兀爻賭锃欃娯辟� 丕賱匕賷 賰丕賳 賲丕賱卅 丕賱丿賳賷丕 賵卮丕睾賱 丕賱賳丕爻 賮賷 丨賷丕鬲賴貙 賵賱賰賳賻賾賴 鬲賵賮賷 賲亘賰乇賸丕.

亘賷丿 兀賳 賵賮丕鬲賴 賱丕 鬲賲乇 賲乇賵乇 丕賱賰乇丕賲貙 廿匕 賷爻鬲亘丿購賾 丕賱賮囟賵賱購 亘賳丕卮乇 兀賲乇賷賰賷 賱賰卮賮 禺賮丕賷丕 兀賵乇丕賯賺 毓賻賱賽賲賻 賲賳 兀氐丿賯丕卅賴 兀賳賻賾 丕賱卮丕毓乇 丕賱賲噩賷丿 兀賵丿毓賴丕 賱丿賶 毓卮賷賯鬲賴 丕賱鬲賷 亘賱睾鬲 丨賷賳卅匕賺 兀乇匕賱 丕賱毓賲乇 賵鬲毓賷卮 禺賱賮 噩購丿購乇賺 賲賳 丕賱賳爻賷丕賳 賲毓 丕亘賳丞 兀禺賷賴丕 賮賷 賲丿賷賳丞 丕賱亘賳丿賯賷丞.

賵賱丕 賷噩丿 丕賱賳丕卮乇購 丕賱胤賲賵丨購 賲丕 賷孬賳賷賴 毓賳 毓夭賲賴 賮賷 鬲鬲亘毓 爻賷乇 鬲賱賰 丕賱兀賵乇丕賯 賵丕賱丕爻鬲賷賱丕亍 毓賱賷賴丕 賵賳卮乇賴丕 毓賱賶 丕賱賲賱兀.

賵賮賷 爻亘賷賱 匕賱賰 賷賱噩兀 廿賱賶 廿禺賮丕亍 卮禺氐賷鬲賴 丕賱丨賯賷賯賷丞 賵丕爻鬲卅噩丕乇 睾乇賮賺 賮賷 賯氐賷乇 丕賱毓卮賷賯丞 丕賱毓噩賵夭 丕賱匕賷 兀亘賱丕賴 丕賱丿賴乇.

鬲鬲爻丕乇毓 丕賱兀丨丿丕孬 丕賱鬲賷 賷噩乇賷 兀睾賱亘購賴丕 賮賷 賲丿賷賳丞 丕賱亘賳丿賯賷丞 賵賳卮賴丿 丨賵丕乇丕鬲 爻丕禺賳丞 賮賷 丕賱兀丿亘 賵丕賱孬賯丕賮丞 賵丕賱丨賷丕丞 丕賱丕噩鬲賲丕毓賷丞 亘賷賳 丕賱賳丕卮乇 鈥� 賵賴賵 丕賱乇丕賵賷 丕賱匕賷 賱丕 丕爻賲 賱賴 鈥� 賵亘賷賳 丕賱毓卮賷賯丞 丕賱毓噩賵夭 氐丕丨亘丞 丕賱賯氐乇.

賮賴賱 賷馗賮乇 丕賱賳丕卮乇購 賮賷 賳賴丕賷丞 丕賱賲胤丕賮 亘丕賱兀賵乇丕賯 賵賷囟毓 賷丿賴 毓賱賷賴丕責

賵賲丕 丿賵乇 丕亘賳丞 兀禺 丕賱毓卮賷賯丞 賮賷 鬲爻賴賷賱 丕賱爻亘賱 兀賲丕賲賴 賱亘賱賵睾 賲丌乇亘賴責

154 pages, Paperback

Published September 12, 2021

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About the author

Henry James

4,138books3,794followers
Henry James was an American-British author. He is regarded as a key transitional figure between literary realism and literary modernism, and is considered by many to be among the greatest novelists in the English language. He was the son of Henry James Sr. and the brother of philosopher and psychologist William James and diarist Alice James.
He is best known for his novels dealing with the social and marital interplay between 茅migr茅 Americans, the English, and continental Europeans, such as The Portrait of a Lady. His later works, such as The Ambassadors, The Wings of the Dove and The Golden Bowl were increasingly experimental. In describing the internal states of mind and social dynamics of his characters, James often wrote in a style in which ambiguous or contradictory motives and impressions were overlaid or juxtaposed in the discussion of a character's psyche. For their unique ambiguity, as well as for other aspects of their composition, his late works have been compared to Impressionist painting.
His novella The Turn of the Screw has garnered a reputation as the most analysed and ambiguous ghost story in the English language and remains his most widely adapted work in other media. He wrote other highly regarded ghost stories, such as "The Jolly Corner".
James published articles and books of criticism, travel, biography, autobiography, and plays. Born in the United States, James largely relocated to Europe as a young man, and eventually settled in England, becoming a British citizen in 1915, a year before his death. James was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1911, 1912, and 1916. Jorge Luis Borges said "I have visited some literatures of East and West; I have compiled an encyclopedic compendium of fantastic literature; I have translated Kafka, Melville, and Bloy; I know of no stranger work than that of Henry James."

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Profile Image for Orsodimondo.
2,386 reviews2,343 followers
January 1, 2023
THE DARK SIDE OF THE ART

description
Veduta di Venezia in atmosfera molto Aspern Papers.

Sembra che siano 30 anni che non rileggo questo libro: 猫 tempo di riprenderlo in mano sapendo di ritrovare l鈥檌mmenso piacere della prima e delle altre volte.
So che ci sar脿 scoperta anche se ormai lo conosco bene.
Ma 猫 un鈥檕pera che non finisce di regalare e svelare.

Dietro l'intreccio pseudo thriller, magnifico stratagemma, c'猫 un intero universo di cultura, amore, vita, conoscenza.

description
I giardini settecenteschi di Palazzo Soranzo Cappello a Venezia che servirono da modello a James.

America e Europa. Donne e uomini. Vecchio e nuovo. Desiderio erotico, fisico, desiderio d鈥檃more.
C鈥櫭� suspense.
C鈥櫭� in forma strepitosa una delle citt脿 pi霉 struggenti, di cui James coglie acutamente l鈥檃tmosfera di appartamento collettivo (questo splendido domicilio comune cos矛 familiare, cos矛 domestico e sonoro, assomiglia anche a un teatro in cui gli attori stacchettino sui ponti).

description
Vittore Carpaccio, il pittore veneziano prediletto da Proust. Qui un dettaglio da 鈥業l miracolo della croce al ponte di Rialto鈥� conservato al Museo dell鈥橝ccademia di Venezia.

C鈥櫭� ragionamento sull鈥檃rte e il potere d鈥檃ttrazione attraverso la stessa arte.
Ci sono scatole cinesi, specchi che rimandano e confondono e illudono.
Dubbi e sensazioni, doppiezza e ambiguit脿.
C鈥櫭� sapiente rotazione d鈥檃spetti, artifizi stilistici meditati e consapevoli.
C鈥櫭� la ricerca del sacro Graal, che 猫 una caccia al tesoro che procede strato dopo strato: ma il prezzo per ottenere lo scrigno, che contiene quello che non si trova, 猫 troppo alto perfino per il cacciatore.


Vanessa Redgrave 猫 Juliana Bordereau nel film TV del 2018 diretto da Julien Landais.

C鈥櫭� una giovane bella donna che fece innamorare perdutamente un grande poeta romantico, che adesso 猫 diventata una vecchia mostruosa in carrozzella, perennemente nascosta da un veletta, probabilmente cieca, avida, dalla lingua tagliente e la mente perfida, forse per貌 guadagnando in ironia, chiss脿.
Per貌, chiss脿, un鈥檃nima le 猫 rimasta, ed 猫 anima innamorata, protettiva del ricordo: quando il narratore tenta di rubare le preziose carte, la vecchia Juliette lo sorprende, si erge ad angelo protettore del tesoro, si erge dalla carrozzella, cala la veletta, lascia dardeggiare i suoi mitici occhi azzurri, gli stessi che avevano fatto innamorare il poeta Aspern, e bolla il narratore con un canaglia di pennivendolo.


Joely Richardson, figlia di Vanessa Redgrave, 猫 Miss Tina.

Secoli di letteratura.
Millenni di esistenza umana.
Una lettura da non perdere: da isola deserta.
Fino alla fine.


Jonathan Rhys-Meyers 猫 il protagonista maschile.

PS
Si tratta di un testo che per la lunghezza, la quasi unit脿 di luogo, la compattezza dell鈥檃zione, il numero ristretto di personaggi, tutti ben sviluppati, si presta molto bene a essere adattato. Cos矛 猫 stato, per lo pi霉 in televisione, anche spagnola e francese, perfino spostando l鈥檃zione da Venezia al Venezuela, ancor pi霉 di frequente in palcoscenico, trasformando l鈥檃rtista defunto del quale si cerca il carteggio in un capitolo mancante al Grande Gatsby di Francis Scott Fitzgerald. Il prossimo tentativo, annunciato l鈥檃nno scorso da Variety, ha se non altro il cast finora pi霉 ghiotto: madre e figlia nella vita e nella finzione, Vanessa Redgrave e Joely Richardson.
PPSS
E alla fine il film 猫 arrivato, ed 猫 stato presentato qualche giorno fa all'ultima Mostra del cinema di Venezia (l'edizione 2018, la #75). Fuori concorso, proiezione speciale, omaggio a Vanessa Redgrave insignita col Leone alla carriera.


Non ho visto il film, ma non credo che lo far貌.
Profile Image for Glenn Russell.
1,485 reviews12.9k followers
March 9, 2018



In the section of his Moral Discourses entitled How a person can preserve their proper character in any situation the Stoic philosopher Epictetus says 鈥淵ou are the one who knows yourself 鈥� which is to say, you know how much you are worth in your own estimation, and therefore at what price you will sell yourself; because people sell themselves at different rates. Taking account of the value of externals, you see, comes at some cost to the value of one鈥檚 own character.鈥�

I cite this quote since, in my reading of this Henry James novella, we are asked to ponder just this question as we follow the narrator鈥檚 quest for papers and letters penned by the late, great poet Jeffrey Aspern.

The first few chapters are like a work of fiction written in slow motion. But then through a series of revelations the story picks up serious momentum having the pace and timing of a detective novel, all the while suffused in the signature elegance of the author鈥檚 language, as in this scene where the narrator takes middle age Miss Tina for a ride on a warm summer evening, 鈥淲e floated long and far, and though my friend gave no high-pitched voice to her glee I was sure of her full surrender. She was more than pleased, she was transported; the whole thing was an immense liberation. The gondola moved with slow strokes, to give her time to enjoy it, and she listened to the splash of the oars, which grew louder and more musically liquid as we passed into the narrow canals, as if it were a revelation of Venice.鈥�

For me, the real philosophic and psychological juice of this fine tale comes in the closing chapter. I wouldn鈥檛 want to disclose any of the luscious details so as to spoil a reader鈥檚 fresh experience. Highly recommended.

Profile Image for Kalliope.
714 reviews22 followers
March 8, 2014

I generally do not like to discuss the plot in a review. And I will not in this one either. But apart from delighting in James鈥� prose and in his superb ability to characterize and develop personalities, reading this novella has made me think about what makes a good story.

For I was captured by the suspense James created out of a relatively simple situation.

What makes a good plot? It certainly needs a structure, a kind of frame that gives it independence and self-sufficiency. That means it demands its own space. It also requires to move along time and to make the reader want to press on that sensation of progress, or rather, to want the waiting and the anxious curiosity disappear and time to evaporate. And for this, an illusion of necessity has to be created when the story unfolds for it has to surprise and satisfy him.

James builds up the suspense by playing with the elasticity of time. He has us waiting. He makes us participants of the contained patience of the hunter who restlessly waits for his loot. But then monotony is woken up suddenly by a move from its prey. And everything is on the move again and acceleration presses on. Only to stop again when the chased turns around and faces us.

This is just one such aspect of this wonderful novella, it seems this one was James鈥� favourite.

Another one would be the warning relevant to those of us who may be lured by the fascination of an artist and his deification. Relic-adoration can make one鈥檚 mind, and morals, turn.

Beware, Proust-ians...

Beware, Shelley-ians...
Profile Image for Jola.
184 reviews430 followers
June 15, 2017
What did I think?
It's really hard to think feeling weak in the presence of sheer beauty, having your breath taken away and being hypnotised!

Two weeks later
Not much has changed since I finished reading. I still feel almost as infatuated with this novella as the nameless narrator was obsessed with Jeffrey Aspern's papers. I am constantly not capable of 鈥楯ola thinks rationally鈥� mode, so instead of sharing logical musings I will tell you what happened when I was reading this amazing book by Henry James, who was absent from Linda Grant鈥檚 murdered library. She explains: 'I have never been able to remember the beginning of his sentences by the time I get to the end鈥�.

The first thing that struck me was Henry James鈥� ornate writing style, which is his hallmark. It鈥檚 the third book by this author that I鈥檝e read, so I was already familiar and ready to face the challenge. Words, words, words鈥� They were like a window pane, separating me from the world of 鈥楾he Aspern Papers鈥�. They not only express thoughts and feelings. They shamelessly shimmer, enchant and dazzle as well. Sometimes I was overwhelmed by never-ending phrases and a bit tired with James鈥� flamboyant eloquence. I felt like breaking the cold glass between me and the narrator, Miss Tita, 'such a terrible relic as the aunt' - Miss Juliana Bordereau and 'the golden glow of Venice'.

Then suddenly I noticed something totally unexpected: the story had touched me to the core, imperceptibly and stealthily. Believe me, I was literally shaky when I was finishing 鈥楾he Aspern Papers鈥�. By the way, in my opinion the last meeting of the narrator and Miss Tita is one of the best literary scenes ever.

I discovered the second surprise after I had finished reading James鈥� novella. I found out that the prototype of Jeffrey Aspern was Percy Bysshe Shelley, who happens to be one of my all time favourite poets. It makes the story even more attractive!

I adore Venice depicted in James' novella. It鈥檚 picturesque, full of changeable light, but also disquieting 鈥� even windows watch the characters discreetly: 鈥橳heir motionless shutters became as expressive as eyes consciously closed鈥�. Truth be told, if I hadn't already got a soft spot for La Serenissima in my heart, I would fall in love reading 鈥楾he Aspern Papers鈥�. It would be truly delightful to read James' novella on spot, so if Venice is your holiday destination this year, please, make sure you take this book with you. If a trip is out of the question, indulge in James' vivid descriptions.

One more thing I love about 鈥楾he Aspern Papers鈥� is its ambiguity. James鈥� novella is not only about les liaisons dangereuses between literature and life. It is also an ode to relativity. You can鈥檛 label the characters easily. It鈥檚 hard to decide who is the victim and who is the tormentor, what are their real intentions. The author provides us with questions, we have to find answers and they most probably will differ, depending on the reader. Ana茂s Nin said: 鈥橶e don鈥檛 see things as they are, we see them as we are.鈥�

Lastly, special thanks to Orsodimondo, whose mesmerising review inspired me to read 鈥楾he Aspern Papers鈥� at once.
Profile Image for Axl Oswaldo.
410 reviews246 followers
April 13, 2022
Having read The Aspern Papers very quickly, I must confess that:
1. I am a huge, huge fan of Henry James and his works.
2. If I pick up a novella or a short story written by him, it is likely that I will read it and keep reading it, from beginning to end, in just one sitting.

Of course The Aspern Papers was not an exception to the previous fact: it took me about four hours to finish it, basically I couldn't put it down, and trust me, the whole experience has been worth it quite a bit.
This is a typical Henry James story: an American man鈥攊n this case a nameless man鈥攚ho is obsessed with finding some papers which belonged to Jeffrey Aspern (a very known poet) travels to Venice, since he thinks that an Aspern's former lover, Mrs Bordereau, might own these relics in her house. The question is: will he be able to do anything in order to get those documents? And if so, at what cost?

This novella has become my second favorite book by James, only after Washington Square, since we have very well developed characters, a good, straightforward prose鈥攏ot the confusing, dense writing style of his last novels鈥�, a compelling story who follows our protagonist and his attempts(?) to get the Aspern papers, and finally, that perfect ending (in my view) 鈥� I couldn't have expected a different one.
In short, I enjoyed reading this great piece of literature a lot, and obviously I'd wholeheartedly recommend it, especially because this might be, for instance, a good reading to kick off your Jamesian journey with.

That was originally what I had loved him [Jeffrey Aspern] for: that at a period when our native land was nude and crude and provincial, when the famous 鈥渁tmosphere鈥� it is supposed to lack was not even missed, when literature was lonely there and art and form almost impossible, he had found means to live and write like one of the first; to be free and general and not at all afraid; to feel, understand, and express everything.
Profile Image for Beverly.
946 reviews427 followers
October 15, 2017
Recommended by Michael, The Aspern Papers is a remarkable short story/novela by James who wrote my favorite ghost story of all time--The Turn of the Screw. As with the Turn of the Screw, much is left unsaid, the reader has to determine through extremely minute variations of conversation and subtle action what is really going on. The main character is morally deficient and we witness his further descent into a quagmire.
Profile Image for Eric.
594 reviews1,080 followers
July 20, 2021
Nabokov is completely spot-on in his criticism of The Aspern Papers, about which he complains in 1941 letter to Edmund Wilson:

Yesterday I read The Aspern Papers. No. He writes with a very sharp nib and the ink is very pale and there is very little of it in his inkpot鈥he style is artistic but it is not the style of an artist鈥e has charm (as the weak blond prose of Turgenev has), but that鈥檚 about all.


I had recalled, while reading The Aspern Papers, a negative reference to it in the The Nabokov-Wilson Letters, but not until I consulted the letters did I realize how perfectly Nabokov nailed the anemia of the novella鈥檚 conception and composition. Nabokov is especially relevant because the situation of The Aspern Papers is so similar to that of Lolita, and the differences in handling are, to use a word that abounds in James鈥檚 prefaces, 鈥渟ignal.鈥� Both works have as their first-person narrators duplicitous men-of-letters who lurk as lodgers in homes of the unwitting - both hoping, through familiarity and proximity, to secure treasures harbored by the proprietors. Humbert wants his landlady鈥檚 daughter; the narrator of The Aspern Papers hopes to get his hands on a cache of letters written to his landlady, in her distant youth, by a famous poet of whose works the narrator is editor and idolater. Both are exquisitely attuned to the movements within the house, and seek to orchestrate fortuitous 鈥渃hance鈥� encounters with some residents and avoid run-ins with others. Both pretend to be absorbed in innocent work (Humbert鈥檚 鈥渓earned opus鈥�, the Aspern narrator鈥檚 gardening) while keeping a sly eye on their quarry. With imaginative abandon Nabokov unleashes Humbert鈥檚 wicked humor and mad lyricism. By contrast James is annoyingly sedate; his narrator is certainly obsessive and imposing and scheming, but all that is gently screened from the reader by the poise and gentlemanliness of the voice James gives him. James does at a few points give the narrator one or two sardonic internal asides, juxtaposed with the hilariously unctuous flattery he dispenses in order to ingratiate himself with the proprietress - but he doesn鈥檛 ever let the him fully inhabit the cynicism and unreasonableness of his quest for Jeffrey Aspern's papers. Lacking any of the idiosyncratic imagination, cracked humor and eloquent blind-spots of an unreliable, unreasonable narrator, The Aspern Papers struck me as staid, and not a little pointless: the narrator's relative inoffensiveness leaves the issues at stake - Americans in the Romantic era, the conditions which heighten or diminish our subjective appreciation of the past - to be treated with greater liveliness and personal slant in James鈥檚 preface than in the novella itself.
Profile Image for Fernando.
718 reviews1,067 followers
December 2, 2020
-隆Creo que s茅 cu谩les son sus motivos!
-Yo dir铆a que s铆, porque la otra noche casi le dije lo mucho que quer铆a que usted me ayudara a lograrlos.
-Yo no puedo hacer eso sin enga帽ar a mi t铆a.
-驴Qu茅 quiere decir con enga帽ar a su t铆a?
-Pues, ella jam谩s consentir铆a en darle lo que usted quiere.
Otros se lo han pedido, le han escrito. Es algo que la enfurece.
-Entonces, 驴tiene papeles valiosos?
-隆Ah, tiene de todo! 鈥揺xclam贸 Miss Tina con un suspiro que curiosamente denotaba cansancio y un repentino tono sombr铆o.


Henry James es considerado uno de los mejores novelistas que dio la literatura. Un hombre extremadamente culto e inteligente que dedic贸 toda su vida a escribir novelas, cuentos, cr铆tica literaria, biograf铆as y ensayos.
La particularidad de este autor es que en dos aspectos de su vida vivi贸 entre dos mundos: por un lado vivi贸 y escribi贸 tanto en el siglo XIX como en el XX, y por el otro dividi贸 su carrera entre los Estados Unidos en la primera parte de su vida e Inglaterra en la segunda.
En cada uno de estos momentos y lugares de su vida domin贸 el arte de narrar con aplomo y distinci贸n. Sus novelas siguen siendo a煤n muy le铆das, sea 鈥淥tra vuelta de tuerca鈥�, 鈥淟as bostonianas鈥�, 鈥淟os europeos鈥�, 鈥淩etrato de una dama鈥� o esta corta novela, 鈥淟os papeles de Aspern鈥�.
En total escribi贸 doce novelas y sus cuentos ocupan doce tomos.
El caso de 鈥淟os papeles de Aspern鈥� se reduce a una nouvelle de poco m谩s de ciento treinta p谩ginas cuyo principal objetivo es crear suspenso y obsesi贸n por parte del narrador acerca de los papeles p贸stumos de un prestigioso poeta llamado Jeffrey Aspern.
Es que en realidad, James se inspir贸 en una historia que 茅l mismo vivi贸 mientras visitaba la ciudad italiana de Florencia en 1887, enter谩ndose de una historia que contaba que una tal condesa de Gamba pose铆a importantes papeles que desacreditaban la m铆tica figura del eterno Lord Byron y que adem谩s aseguraba haber tenido relaci贸n con Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Montado en esta an茅cdota, el autor traslada la acci贸n a Venecia (y no Florencia como originalmente hab铆a pensado) para poner en escena el intento del narrador de hacerse con los papeles de Jeffrey Aspern que est谩n en manos de la anciana Juliana Bordereau.
Claro que para lograr esto deber谩 poner en pr谩ctica toda su astucia, teniendo que pactar y ceder en muchas cuestiones ante la anciana y su sobrina, Miss Tina Bordereau para hacerse del bot铆n.
Lo que primeramente parece un plan no demasiado arriesgado va transform谩ndose en una carrera de obst谩culos y una serie de impedimentos que lo van alejando cada vez m谩s de los codiciados documentos.
Sobre la 煤ltima parte de la novela suceder谩n hechos que pondr谩n en riesgo el 茅xito del intento y para ello 茅l deber谩 agotar todos los recursos posibles.
L贸gicamente que para saber qu茅 sucede realmente con los papeles de Jeffrey Aspern, hay que leer esta peque帽a novela que posee adem谩s, la exquisito narrativa y buen gusto literario que Henry James pose铆a a la hora de contarnos una buena historia.
Profile Image for None Ofyourbusiness Loves Israel.
611 reviews46 followers
May 7, 2025
James鈥檚 1888 novella smuggles a sly dilemma into a sun-faded Venetian frame. Its nameless narrator, all teeth and manners, sneaks his way into the lives of Juliana Bordereau and her niece Miss Tina, armed with nothing but false charm and a scholar鈥檚 greed. He wants the papers of the deceased American poet鈥擜spern鈥檚 private writings鈥攁nd he鈥檒l water houseplants or worm through keyholes if that鈥檚 the cost of admission.

"I had invoked him and he had come," our narrator admits about his fixation on the long-dead poet, revealing the almost supernatural power literary obsession holds over him.

His calculated approach begins with renting rooms in their crumbling palazzo under false pretenses: "I had taken Mrs. Prest's advice...offer them a generous sum for their house." What follows is a riveting ethical deterioration as our protagonist justifies increasingly dubious actions in pursuit of literary treasure.

The narrator courts Miss Tina's favor by cultivating their neglected garden while plotting to pillage her family's secrets: "I lingered for half an hour on the spot, partly because Miss Tina had asked me to and partly because I liked it."听

James gives us a collector who treats people like archives. Miss Tina, a shy puzzle piece in this echoing estate, becomes a sort of living doorknob: turned gently, then with force. Our paper-chaser, with his velvet gloves off, finally tips into full-on literary burglary鈥攖iptoeing through rooms where ghosts still have squatter鈥檚 rights.

The slap comes not as a blow but as a line: 鈥淎h, you publishing scoundrel!鈥� Juliana doesn鈥檛 shout. She labels, neatly and without ceremony. After her death, the niece鈥檚 sudden offer of marriage is a trapdoor, sprung under the weight of implication. Does he want her, or will he pretend to?

James aims straight at the thirst for posthumous possession. The narrator鈥檚 need to "put his hand on them" is as base as it sounds. What looks like reverence curls back into appetite. The novella rejects the need of researchers and documentarians to uncover genius. Instead it claims the the real drive is about who gets to open the drawer, and what gets broken when they do.
Profile Image for Chrissie.
2,811 reviews1,430 followers
July 21, 2020
is a fictional story inspired by the letters Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote to Mary Shelley's stepsister, Claire Clairmont, who saved them until she died. (Source Wiki)

I find it interesting to observe what Henry James鈥� imagination has then invented. All the characters are fictional. He draws a story where two literary critics, believing that letters written by the famed but long-time deceased poet Jeffrey Aspern, are in the keeping of the poet鈥檚 former lover. They invent a plan to get their hands on them. The first critic writes a letter to the poet鈥檚 lover. He is rebuffed. They agree the second critic should go and visit the now very old lady. She is living in a huge, decrepit old mansion in Venice, with her niece. The mansion may be huge, but the two women are short of funds. Through deception, the second of the two critics, it is he who is the narrator of the story, sets himself up as boarder in the women鈥檚 residence. Will he get his hands on the letters before she dies? This is the gist of the story.

There is a surprising twist at the very end of the tale.

What makes the story interesting is one鈥檚 growing awareness of why the three characters, the boarder, the lover and her niece, do what they do. What motivates each? Memories of a past love affair and bygone days. Money--but for what purpose? Loneliness and the need for a companion. The thrill of possessing original documents written by a famed author, an author whose work you more than admire. And guilt鈥攇uilt pushes a person to do what had not been planned.

The audiobook is very well narrated by Adam Sims. The words spoken are clear and easy to follow. Four stars for the narration.

I like this, but do not love it. It鈥檚 easy to follow, but it drags in parts. It is the ending that makes the story worth reading. It is at the end the character鈥檚 motivations are made glaringly evident.

**

*4 stars
* 3 stars
* 3 stars
* 3 stars
* TBR
Profile Image for Emilio Berra.
285 reviews254 followers
November 6, 2017
Giallo veneziano d'autore
"Il carteggio Aspern", breve e bellissimo romanzo, venne scritto da H. James nel 1887 durante un suo soggiorno in Italia.
Lo spunto deriva da un fatto di cui sent矛 parlare: un fervido ammiratore di Shelley, avendo saputo che l'ormai anziana amante di Byron (e madre di Allegra) viveva a Firenze con una nipote d'et脿 matura e che le due donne conservavano un carteggio epistolare fra i due poeti, escogit貌 un piano per insediarsi nella stessa dimora delle due signore e venire cos矛 a conoscenza dell'ambito tesoro.

Henry James ambienta la vicenda nella bella cornice di Venezia, citt脿 che ben conosceva : "ogni cosa era avvolta nel fulgore dorato di Venezia", col rumore del "tuffo dei remi che nei canali stretti si faceva pi霉 sonoro e pi霉 liquido musicalmente".
I personaggi rilevanti sono tre: l'Io narrante (ammiratore del poeta Aspern, da tempo scomparso) e due attempate signorine: l'ultracentenaria un tempo amata dal letterato e la nipote cinquantenne.
Le due dame vivono "segregate in un vecchio palazzo" con delizioso giardino; "misteriose (...), riluttanti a chiedere favori e poco desiderose di ricevere attenzioni".
Ed 猫 proprio in questa antica dimora che il nostro protagonista cerca di insinuarsi : ci riuscir脿 e potr脿 conoscere le leggendarie padrone di casa.
La vecchissima signora pare essere unica superstite di un tempo lontano di cui si colgono soltanto "meri echi, fantasmi e polvere". La sua parvenza 猫 spettrale : "sugli occhi portava una orribile visiera verde che le serviva quasi da maschera" , "la testa avvolta in un vecchio pizzo nero" ; si direbbe un bel teschio rivestito ('ancora') di pelle.

La tensione narrativa per l'eventuale scoperta dell'ambito carteggio 猫 quella del romanzo giallo. Ma qui c'猫 ben di pi霉 : una splendida prosa d'autore, una scrittura magnifica che indora di s茅 l'intero racconto. Un gioiello letterario forse inaspettato.
Profile Image for Lynne King.
499 reviews811 followers
August 12, 2013
I have very mixed feelings about this novella. I have never read any of Henry James鈥� books before but upon advice it was suggested that I start with one of his novellas. So I decided upon this book as there are only eighty pages and it seemed as good a place as ever to start.

I actually don鈥檛 like Venice as a place and so I鈥檓 sure I鈥檒l be called a philistine. I went in the month of December, many years ago, with an aged aunt which did not auger well. It was windy, the pigeons in St Mark鈥檚 square were a real nuisance, and I felt under siege; we were ripped off in a restaurant next to the square (my fault entirely) and, if I recall, we unsuccessfully tried to see a particular painting of Caravaggio (I cannot remember which one in a chapel off the square). We were also ripped off by a gondolier who nearly dropped my Aunt into the foul-smelling canal!

So it鈥檚 combined with these thoughts that I had my first experience of Henry James鈥� writing. The backdrop of Venice seems to be far more enticing in this book than when I was exposed to it. The book is nevertheless slow in starting and I really don鈥檛 like having a narrator not knowing his age, and whose main aim in life is to acquire the papers by any possible means of a dead American poet called Jeffrey Aspern. Prior to his death, he had a relationship with Juliana Bordereau, an elderly woman now living in a dilapidated palazzo in Venice with her niece Tina and Aspern鈥檚 papers are supposedly with the former.

Well, the book begins to gain momentum when the narrator feels that the only way to attempt to obtain the papers is to become a lodger in Miss Bordereau鈥檚 palazzo. She turns out to be a wiley individual, who surprises our narrator by being money-oriented and manages to extract 1,000 francs a month for three months from the elusive lodger. He鈥檚 shocked by this large amount but decides to stay in the palazzo regardless. He in turn entices them with the prospect of a garden abundant with flowers, as Tina loved them, and in his efforts to further ingratiate himself with the pair, starts delivering the cut blooms to their apartment in the palazzo.

This book is about choice and intrigue more than anything and that is the amusing thread that permeates it. I kept on getting the feeling that each individual was trying to outdo the other and the most successful person being? Well that鈥檚 for the reader to find out.

In the midst of all of this, we see the rather bland middle-aged Tina, who appears to stay with her aunt because she has nowhere to go, but gradually there鈥檚 a perceptible change in her relationship with our frustrated lodger, who gets the odd warning signs from her but brushes them off. His greed for the papers is uppermost in his mind. Prior to coming to live in the palazzo he had told his friend Mrs Prest that he is prepared:

鈥淭o make love to the niece鈥� and her reply:

鈥淎h, wait till you see her!鈥�

And does he? Is his ambition so great to get his wish granted?

Another odd thought about the writing style is that there鈥檚 no description of the narrator. He鈥檚 basically a blank canvas, not much is really mentioned about Tina either but Juliana is given an air of mystery in that she wears a half veil that covers her eyes. When our narrator first sees her, she looks so old that he鈥檚 worried she may die before he has accomplished his task.

And we head on relentlessly to the end when the narrator who feels he鈥檚 getting nowhere to determining whether or not Juliana actually does have these papers, or has she in fact burnt them? Finally, he cannot stop himself from attempting to open the 鈥渟ecretary鈥�, where he feels the papers are kept. And at this stage, there鈥檚 a completely unexpected event.

As for the twist at the end, well this is where the choice comes in but which way will our narrator go? How ambitious is he really?

Did I like this book? I have ambivalent feelings and so I will go middle of the road. I think, however, that I will try another of James鈥� books as he certainly has a mesmerizing writing style about him.
Profile Image for Kathleen.
Author听1 book249 followers
August 3, 2021
In 1909, in his mid-60鈥檚, Henry James destroyed many of his own personal papers, letters and photographs. 20 years earlier, he wrote this novella, inspired by the true story of the muse of a long dead but much-revered poet who still held some of the poet鈥檚 private papers, and explored the lengths a literary critic might go to obtain them.

James wrote about his inspiration in the Preface (included in my copy) from :
鈥淚 saw it somehow at the very first blush as romantic 鈥� that Jane Clairmont, the half-sister of Mary Godwin, Shelley鈥檚 second wife and for a while the intimate friend of Byron and the mother of his daughter Allegra, should have been living on in Florence, where she had long lived, up to our own day, and in fact, that I happened to hear of her but a little sooner, I might have seen her in the flesh.鈥�

That romantic impression he had permeates this story, which gently asks so many questions! What is the nature of obsession, and what should remain private, and how does our past impact our future?

It takes place in Venice, which becomes a character in itself: 鈥淪ee how it glows with the advancing summer; how the sky and the sea and the rosy air and the marble of the palaces all shimmer and melt together.鈥�

And in this romantic setting, he gives us three unique people, and reveals so much about them in so few words.

An excellent display of Henry James鈥� literary powers, and a fascinating little gem of a novel.

鈥淪he said he was a god.鈥� Miss Tina gave me this information flatly, without expression; her tone might have made it a piece of trivial gossip. But it stirred me deeply as she dropped the words into the summer night; their sound might have been the light rustle of an old unfolded love-letter.鈥�
Profile Image for Sara.
Author听1 book859 followers
July 31, 2021
A novella by that studies obsession and the lengths to which a person will go to satisfy his curiosity about the life of another, , is grounded in a tidbit of history. The story takes place in Venice in the 19th Century, where a publisher/critic attempts to wrestle private letters from a very elderly lady who was once involved with a famous poet, Jeffrey Aspern. To this end, he finagles lodgings in the lady鈥檚 villa and attempts to enlist the aid of her niece in procuring the 鈥減apers鈥�.

The tidbit of history would be that of Claire Clairmont, half-sister to Mary Shelley and perhaps Percy Bysshe Shelley鈥檚 lover. She was absolutely the lover of Lord Byron, and bore him a daughter who only survived to the age of five. It is easy to imagine what her letters and memorabilia would have meant to those interested in these men, but she was close and shared very little with anyone who might take it public.

Knowing 鈥� crotchety old grand dame is based on a real person made it somewhat sadder to me. I wondered if James felt empathy with Clairmont, since he would, himself, have known what it was to have others wish to pry too deeply into your personal life and memories.

has long been my favorite novella. There are depths to it that cause me to revisit it over and over again. The Aspern Papers is of the same quality, if less complex, and I can see that James is a master at tapping the internal struggles of human beings. To fully understand and appreciate this work, you must study each of the three main characters, what motivates them and what they are willing to do to have the thing they want.

, a master of the human condition herself, considered Henry James to be the finest writer she had ever met. Who am I to argue with such an informed opinion?

I am planning a read of in September, and looking forward to more Henry James, an author I have obviously neglected for far too long.


December 14, 2017
Though written eight years before James鈥� Figure in the Carpet, The Aspern Papers is a more sophisticated, richer work. Here James has set himself a larger stage in which to develop characters grown out of the intrigue of the tale. While reading I felt the stage growing, as though James was keeping up with the narration as it was told. The punctiliousness of his style set the perfect distance within which to watch the characters and to live with them. Here, the tension was strung with a fine thread waiting to engross a reader鈥檚 mind.

Mine was engrossed. I needed to find out what was going to happen with these people, with the problem about where the Aspern Papers were, would end up. We have an idea from the beginning from our narrator where they might reside. The poet of the papers is to our journalist more than icon, residing within him as a form of a god. But it is not forgotten that beyond the literary ethereal existence residing in the treasure trove of letters there also awaits fame and a banquet of money.

James has found the perfect setting, or it has found him, of early century Venice, its winding canals, the magical transport of oared gondolas, an old palatial home, itself wearing down under the weight of passing years. Locked within are the ancient aunt and the elderly niece who live an existence that does not include their leaving their sanctuary or allowing others in.

This is a world that exists within itself. James leaves us no choice but to carry it inside us, be affected by it, with its parables of greed and yearnings, of the suffocation of loss. This is a work of art so be careful.
Profile Image for Davide.
501 reviews130 followers
September 9, 2018
Misurare la grandezza

Questo breve aureo romanzo - tra i collaboratori internazionali alla costruzione del grande mito di Venezia - 猫 incentrato sul tentativo di entrare in possesso delle carte del grande poeta Jeffrey Aspern, conservate da un鈥檃ntica fiamma, Miss Bordereau, ora anziana, cinica e venale, operato da un critico-veneratore, che parla in prima persona, senza impedire, per貌, che il lettore percepisca i suoi difetti.

La manovra di avvicinamento contempla grande spesa di tempo e denaro, e prevede anche una forma di seduzione dell鈥檃ttempata nipote Miss Tina. Ma tutto si deve tentare per accostarsi personalmente all鈥檃rte e agli oggetti raggiunti dall鈥檃ura dell鈥檃rtista!

Ricordo quanto mi piacevano i dialoghi-schermaglie tra il critico e l鈥檃nziana signora; in particolare quello, ambiguo, in cui lei dichiara il suo odio per la critica e lui difende il ruolo di chi cerca di fare luce intorno ai grandi filosofi e poeti, quasi consapevole della funzione di - direbbe Bourdieu - 鈥渃reazione del creatore鈥�:
芦What becomes of the work I just mentioned, that of the great philosophers and poets? It鈥檚 all vain words if there鈥檚 nothing to measure it by禄
Con l鈥檃rguta risposta della vecchia: 芦You talk as if you were a tailor禄.
Profile Image for Peter.
89 reviews60 followers
April 27, 2017
Originally published in 1888, this short novel reads like a contemporary mystery or thriller. James' prose is beautiful and complex like many of his peers of the day, but does not feel as weighted down. In fact, the use of candles and other time indicators aside, one could easily convince me Aspern was recently written by one of today's better writers. To be sure, James writes suspense and surprise endings as well as any genre author. If you've read Turn of the Screw, this won't come as a surprise. All told, if you are a genre reader who is looking to introduce classic literature into your reading, you could do worse than to start here. Also, literature readers looking for a quick beach read that will still make you look more erudite than Sidney Sheldon, Henry James' Aspern Papers might fit the bill.
Profile Image for Ben Loory.
Author听4 books729 followers
August 30, 2011
the more i read of henry james, the more i think he may be my favorite writer. it's weird, because he seems to be exactly all those things i most despise in writers-- he's long-winded, slow-moving, mostly humorless, always deeply embedded in real places, real people, real history, the real world-- really, i don't feel like i should like him at all! but then, somehow, underneath all of that, there is always in his writing a deep sense of mystery-- not just about the events in his stories, but about life itself, what it all is and means, and also-- maybe most importantly to me-- about this strange thing called storytelling he does so well. i can always feel him at the ends of his stories, sort of backing quietly away from the scene, looking at me as i digest the last lines, and smiling a little bit to himself. how did i do? he always seems to be saying. and then he's gone the second it sinks in.

i should probably add he's always wearing a white suit.

kinda like colonel sanders.
Profile Image for Pat.
421 reviews111 followers
December 13, 2017
鈥淔urfante di uno scrittorucolo!鈥�


La gondola scivola pigramente lungo il Canal Grande, nell鈥檃bbraccio molle e indefinibile di un鈥檈stiva notte veneziana. Non lontano c鈥櫭� il palazzo grigio e rosa, un tempo certamente splendido, residenza delle signorine Bordereau: l鈥檜ltracentenaria Juliana, che fu amante e musa ispiratrice del poeta Jeffrey Aspern, e la non pi霉 giovane nipote Tina. Pare che in casa sia conservato il carteggio amoroso fra Juliana e il poeta. Quivi giunge il protagonista, critico letterario, studioso e grande estimatore di Aspern, nonch茅 voce narrante, disposto a tutto pur di prendere possesso dell鈥檈pistolario. Riuscir脿 a guadagnarsi la simpatia di Tina, a farsi ammettere in casa Bordereau. Si presenter脿 sotto falso nome, si offrir脿 di pagare qualsiasi cifra pur di avere qualche stanza del palazzo in affitto. Poi inizier脿 il suo lavoro diabolico e sottile.

Da una parte pare si cerchi un accordo in nome dell鈥檃rte, dall鈥檃ltro in quello dell鈥檃more. Ma a ben guardare, 猫 solo questione di profitto personale.
E il prezzo, come sempre in questi casi, 猫 davvero alto.
Profile Image for Paula Mota.
1,479 reviews491 followers
May 29, 2021
Um editor hospeda-se sob disfarce na mans茫o de duas americanas solteironas a viverem agora em Veneza, para se apoderar dos 煤ltimos manuscritos do poeta Jeffrey Aspern, agora na posse da sua envelhecida e eremita musa. Henry James nunca me desilude, com as suas hist贸rias de final surpreendente e a sua escrita magistral, com frases que se encadeiam de forma intrincada e serpeante, sem que, ainda assim, se perca o racioc铆nio.
Profile Image for Bill.
289 reviews83 followers
December 31, 2020
A nameless narrator, a writer, travels to Venice with hopes of obtaining a trove of papers of the late, great poet Jeffrey Aspern, which he and a colleague hope to publish. They are in the possession of Juliana Bordereau, an elderly former lover of Aspern, who has spurned an earlier inquiry about them by the narrator's colleague.

Aware of Miss Bordereau's prickliness about the papers, the narrator mounts a complicated campaign to engage with her and the niece who attends her, Miss Tita, over the course of a summer. That he is unencumbered by an overdeveloped conscience is evident from the start, as he presents a false identity to avoid association with his colleague's failed effort.

I enjoyed this novella, my introduction to James, with its beautiful descriptions of Venice and the twist the story takes at the end, and hope to read more of James's work.

The LibriVox audiobook, read by Nicholas Clifford, was excellent. I was sad to find that Dr. Clifford, reader of many LibriVox audiobooks and an eminent scholar and teacher of East Asian studies, died last year.

Profile Image for Ivana Books Are Magic.
523 reviews276 followers
January 15, 2020
The Aspern Papers is a little gem of a book. Its plot is simple enough at first. An unnamed narrator sets to Venice, to find a woman who possibly still has love letters from a famous writer. The unnamed narrator is after those private letters and he feels justified in his quest- for he does it for the love of literature. However, where does the literature begin and the private life ends? Now, I'm pretty sure I had read this novella before I knew about the plot being based on the letters Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote to Mary Shelley's (his wife's!) stepsister, Claire. Miss Claire Clairmont kept them until she died and so did (it seems) the lady this novella introduces us with. Whether she will be willing to share them is altogether another matter!

This is a wonderful novella, that deals with (among other things) a very contemporary theme- issue of privacy. It is filled with suspense up to the very last page. The author ability to create suspense is quite impressive, but he does not stop at that as his writing is so much more then creating anxiety and uncertainty. Henry James writing is as beautiful and complex in this novella as it is in his novels.

Henry James fascinates me as a writer and this is why- I always feel that there is this ambiguity to his writing. At times I feel it to be both attractive and repulsive. It is as if there is some message that can never be fully grasped no matter how much you try. I admire the fact that here is a writer that does not try to simplify the world, that is not afraid to admit that we live in a complex reality.

Henry James' sophistication as a writer is worth praise, his style is elegant and his finesse seducing. However, I have to admit that sometimes I struggle with his writing. There is this feeling of expecting something and not finding it...yet that is what is fascinating about his writing, it's like a painting that is hard to decipher, and that perhaps portrays more then one reality.

The writer himself supposedly treasured this book, I have to agree with him, it is a beautiful and delicate piece of writing. As a said, I found the theme to relevant and fascinating. The protagonist is a man in search of love letters written by his favourite poet. He is in for some trouble since the object of love letters in question is advanced in years and she not willing to part from them for the world.

The novel makes me think about an interesting questions about human nature- why do we feel right to take what we want? Why do we feel that if we love something or somebody that thing or person must belong to us? Why do we feel we have right to have something just if we happen to want that? Why is love such a good justification for selfish acts? I remember this feeling of guilt I always have when I read Kafka's private letters- and I absolutely cannot help myself? Where is the line? Should we sometimes leave the artist alone. All in all, this book posses some really interesting questions. Moreover, the characters are well developed. The plot is well executed and the writing is beautiful. I definitely recommend it. A must read for a Henry James fan.
Profile Image for Yani.
423 reviews201 followers
April 4, 2017
Henry James es uno de mis autores favoritos, pero la relaci贸n es complicada. Por un lado, lo amo porque convierte argumentos que parecen ser simples (sean realistas o no) en una historia de suspenso. Por el otro, lo odio por sus finales y porque siempre hay algo que no nos cuenta, algo que subyace a las palabras o se escapa entre ellas. Tengo m谩s razones, pero estas le conciernen a la novela en cuesti贸n. Los papeles de Aspern intriga, a pesar de que gire demasiado sobre un mismo eje (para mi gusto, lo agota) y sea predecible. No merece menos de un 3.5.

Un cr铆tico literario sin nombre va tras los pasos de un poeta llamado Jeffrey Aspern. Consciente de que la mujer que inspir贸 su obra est谩 viva y que posee cartas del escritor (aunque ella lo niegue), el protagonista toma una identidad y se vuelve hu茅sped en la casa de dicha se帽ora. Juliana y Tita Bordereau (t铆a y sobrina, respectivamente) viven en Venecia y no mantienen relaciones sociales, hecho que dificulta el pedido de los papeles tan deseados 驴Existieron o todav铆a existen? En este 煤ltimo de los casos, 驴habr谩 alguna forma 茅tica de conseguirlos?

La trama, en parte, nos muestra a un cr铆tico desesperado por unas cartas que est谩 dispuesto a publicar. La otra parte se basa en las Bordereau, dos personajes que me encantaron porque son un misterio en s铆 mismos. Juliana es una anciana codiciosa que habla poco, que oculta sus ojos con un velo, adem谩s de hacer lo mismo con su pasado. Las interacciones con el cr铆tico son imperdibles, ya que James tiene una manera muy distintiva de resolver los di谩logos. Y Tita es una muchacha ingenua, encerrada en una casa grande demasiado opresiva. Llegu茅 a sentir l谩stima por ella. Casi desde el principio, los intereses de los personajes se hacen demasiado evidentes porque ellos mismos se encargan de explicitarlos. Por eso me quej茅 en los status: tuve la sensaci贸n de que empec茅 a predecir ciertas cosas antes de tiempo. No dir茅 si las anticipaciones se cumplieron o no, as铆 que no har茅 comentarios generales sobre el final.

Esta novela corta me pareci贸 una de las m谩s sencillas del autor. James adora las oraciones infinitas (aclaro que es una exageraci贸n: no llega al extremo de William Faulkner) y dar por entendidas algunas cosas, pero aqu铆 fue bastante ben茅volo. Simplemente, este narrador en primera persona me result贸 m谩s fresco y m谩s llevadero, a pesar de que tenga impregnada la personalidad un tanto repelente del protagonista. Tambi茅n me gustaron las fugaces (y no por eso menos intensas) descripciones de Venecia, un marco fant谩stico para esta historia que oscila entre ser una aventura de investigaci贸n del cr铆tico y un relato de suspenso que lo involucra directamente.

En este momento no considerar铆a que este es el texto m谩s brillante que le铆 del autor (dado que me faltan unos cuantos, no afirmo nada) y, sin embargo, creo que es una buena opci贸n para empezar a leerlo. Los papeles de Aspern es un libro ligero y retiene la atenci贸n del lector, mucho m谩s si la tem谩tica lo toca de cerca.
Profile Image for Sketchbook.
695 reviews250 followers
December 15, 2023
To get what you want, would you pay a price -- or bolt?

James handles the sexuality very sedately, as expected. But it's compelling nonetheless. And sex is a metaphor for Anything. Classic. I've now read 3xs.
Profile Image for Silvia.
286 reviews19 followers
April 23, 2023
4.5猸� Con evidenza Venezia 猫 il mio punto debole, quando un libro 猫 ambientato qui sono sempre rapita nelle pagine, aggiungo la maestria di James nel costruire con pochi tratti un mondo letterario evocativo e ricco di suggestioni.
Profile Image for Sinem A..
478 reviews284 followers
February 19, 2019
Villa Matas
谋n Bartleby cemiyetinde gezinirken Brodsky nin Venedik i kar艧谋ma 莽谋k谋nca cemiyete ara verip Venedik'de gezinmeye ba艧lad谋m ve Henry Jamesin Aspern in Mektuplar谋na vard谋m. Brodsky nin Venedik 眉zerine yazd谋klar谋 beni o kadar etkikedi ki bir kitapla 莽谋kamad谋m bu 艧ehirden. Tam da seyehat edemedi臒im d枚nemde harika bir seyahat imkan谋 verdi.
Caan谋m Henry James zaten Bir Kad谋n谋n Portresi ile hayranl谋k duymama sebep olmu艧tu. Bu defa Venedik fonunda vukuu bulan ve Lord Byron un sevgilisinin ya艧ad谋臒谋 ger莽ek olaylardan yola 莽谋karak kurgulad谋臒谋 k谋sa roman谋nda, ad谋n谋 gizli tutan kahraman谋m谋z谋n Jeffrey Aspern in a艧k谋 Mrs Bordeau nun elindeki mektuplara ula艧mak i莽in at谋ld谋臒谋 maceray谋 anlat谋yor herzamanki yo臒un diliyle.
Bir yazara duyulan tutkunun insana neler yapt谋r谋p neler yapt谋ramayaca臒谋n谋 kanallar evler odalar ve bah莽eler 眉zerinden izliyoruz tam bir tiyatro sahnesi gibi..
Profile Image for Sue K H.
385 reviews89 followers
August 3, 2021
How do you do it Henry James? How do you draw me听 into a book with all of the characters being creepy and unlovable? Since you're not here, I'll answer:

1. You create a vivid scene that allows me to be a fly on the wall watching the action.
2. You use a cool setting like Venice that lends itself to mystery.
3. You create perfect
sentences听that even when long, comfortably lull me in.
4. You hold back, leaving a shroud听of haunting mystery around the characters.

As it says in the book blurb, this story was inspired by a real one, but the real one couldn't be this good because Henry James is the secret sauce.听 In this story the unnamed narrator is an editor for a once obscure but currently appreciated poet, Jeffery Aspern, who he likens to a god.听 听When he finds out Aspern's lover is still alive, he becomes obsessed with obtaining his private papers from her. With the encouragement of his lady friend, Mrs. Prest who听knows the lover's听location and circumstances he is able to come up with a way in.听 He decides to gain her confidence by becoming her boarder under an assumed name, and flirting with her niece.听 He justifies to himself:

"I can arrive at the papers only by putting her off her guard, and I can put her off her guard only by ingratiating diplomatic practices. Hypocrisy, duplicity are my only chance. I am sorry for it, but for Jeffrey Aspern's sake I would do worse still."

Juliana Bordereua听and her niece, Miss Tita live in obscurity in a large, mostly empty dilapidated old home on a quiet canal.听 They are thought to听be witches听by some.听 听Our narrator plays up their garden as why he must live there.听 The niece听agrees to ask her Aunt and he comes back the next day to meet with her.听听

"Her presence seemed somehow to contain his, and I felt nearer to him at that first moment of seeing her than I ever had been before or ever have been since. Yes, I remember my emotions in their order, even including a curious little tremor that took me when I saw that the niece was not there. With her, the day before, I had become sufficiently familiar, but it almost exceeded my courage (much as I had longed for the event) to be left alone with such a terrible relic as the aunt. She was too strange, too literally resurgent. Then came a check, with the perception that we were not really face to face, inasmuch as she had over her eyes a horrible green shade which, for her, served almost as a mask. I believed for the instant that she had put it on expressly, so that from underneath it she might scrutinize me without being scrutinized herself"

And thus begins the cat and mouse game, but who is the cat? All three are secretive with each other and James leaves us wondering how each became the way they are which adds to their mystique听and keeps us guessing how far each will go.听

I was entranced from beginning to end.听 This little novella carries a lot of weight as James also has a theme of the Old World vs the New World running through.听 Which one is more creepy?听 You decide.听听
Profile Image for Janelle.
1,523 reviews322 followers
August 11, 2021
A dark novella with an unnamed narrator obsessed with the work of a romantic poet called Aspern. Rumours of papers being held by the poets muse, Juliana lead the narrator to Venice where he smooth talks his way into renting a floor of the rundown palazzo where elderly frail Juliana and her spinster niece Tita live. All three of the characters are unlikeable especially the narrator who seems to think that his right to see the personal papers of his favourite writer is more important than any other consideration. But the two women aren鈥檛 victims, they seem to be suspicious of the narrators motives from the start. James based Juliana on Claire Clairmont, and letters she had from Shelley but I thought more about Byron as I was reading and how his memoirs were burnt by his friends and family after his death.
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