作品情報
ヘンリー・ジェイムズの晩年を題材にした長編。
ヘンリー・ジェイムズの晩年を題材にした長編。創作と孤独、愛と喪失に向き合う作家の内面を丁寧に掘り下げ、記憶とアイデンティティの問題を静謐な筆致で描く作品。
書籍情報
- 出版社
- Scribner
- 発売日
- 2004-10-30
- ページ数
- 352ページ
- 言語
- 英語
- サイズ
- 15.54 x 2.74 x 22.86 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9780743250405
- ISBN-10
- 0743250400
- 価格
- 3841 JPY
- カテゴリ
- 洋書/Literature & Fiction/Contemporary
Like Michael Cunningham in The Hours, Colm Tóibín captures the extraordinary mind and heart of a great writer. Brilliant and profoundly moving, The Master tells the story of Henry James, a man born into one of America's first intellectual families two decades before the Civil War. James left his country to live in Paris, Rome, Venice, and London among privileged artists and writers. In stunningly resonant prose, Tóibín captures the loneliness and longing, the hope and despair of a man who never married, never resolved his sexual identity, and whose forays into intimacy inevitably failed him and those he tried to love. The emotional intensity of Tóibín's portrait of James is riveting. Time and again, James, a master of psychological subtlety in his fiction, proves blind to his own heart and incapable of reconciling his dreams of passion with his own fragility. Tóibín is "a great and humanizing writer" who describes complex relationships in "supple, beautifully modulated prose" ( The Washington Post Book World ). In The Master, he has written his most ambitious and heartbreaking novel, an extraordinarily inventive encounter with a character at the cusp of the modern age, elusive to his own friends and even family, yet astonishingly vivid in these pages.
Colm TÓibÍn was born in Ireland in 1955. He is the author of six novels including The Blackwater Lightship , The Master , winner of a Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and Brooklyn, winner of a Costa Book Award. Twice shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, TÓibÍn lives in Dublin and New York.
レビュー
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こういう小説があるとよい
これは伝記小説である。主人公はヘンリー・ジェームズ(1843--1916)というアメリカの小説家。ボストンの裕福な家庭に生まれ,後半生はイギリスを本拠にして小説を書いた。晦渋で難解な文章を書くと言われることが多い。実兄はプラグマティズムで有名な哲学者ウィリアム・ジェームズである。夏目漱石が「兄は小説のように易しい哲学書を書くが,弟は哲学のように難しい小説を書く」と嘆いたのはよく知られている。 トイビンの小説はこの人の晩年,1895年から始まる。そして1899年暮れの最後の場面では兄ウィリアムとその一家が登場する。この間に『ねじの回転』『ポイントンの収集品』『かごの中』などの小説を次々に発表するわけだが,そのそれぞれについて構想がだんだん膨らんで小説に出来上がるまでのプロセスも描かれている。それだけではない。召使とのトラブルとか,当時のイギリス社会を騒がせたオスカー・ワイルドの事件なども小説の中に出てくるし,若い頃の出来事にフラッシュバックしたりもする。 主人公は一生独身だった。これについて何箇所かエピソードが挿入されている。女流作家を自殺に追い込んだり,若い彫刻家のことで胸を躍らせたりなど,暗示的だ。 彼の初期の傑作『貴婦人の肖像』の最後に,イザベラ・アーチャが自分を裏切った夫オズモンド氏の所へ自ら進んで帰って行ってしまうという場面がある。これに共感できないという意見が登場人物の一人によって表明されているのは興味深かった。願わくは,作家本人の口で弁明させて欲しかった・・・。
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The Genesis Seeds of Genius: Meditating on Henry James
Colm Toibin's fine novel THE MASTER is an act of art in and of itself. This is a well-researched biography of one of America's greatest novelists but it is also a novel, a great work of literature that sifts through all the extant data found in the copious letters between Henry James and his brother (the equally famous William James) and others of his family and acquaintances, other biographies, and the vast writings about this extraordinary family . But what Toibin has achieved is more a dissection of the mind of a man who produced so many great books, showing us the gradual development of influences that, once digested, became such great books as 'The Turn of the Screw', 'The Portrait of a Lady', 'Washington Square', etc. THE MASTER opens with the expatriate James' embarrassing failure as a playwright ('Guy Domville') while his compatriot Oscar Wilde is enjoying tremendous success in another nearby London theater. This parallel plays significantly throughout the novel as a point of reference for James' periods of self doubt, fear of his own like sexual longings that ended Wilde's career in a famous trial, his odd transplantation from America to the United Kingdom and Italy, etc. Toibin's novel (by inference of his chapter titles) takes place from 1895 to 1899, but using the flashback and flash forward technique we are privy to the whole history of the James family (the premiere intellectual family in the latter 19th century), Henry's childhood and avoidance of serving in the Civil War, and all of the famous people who surrounded him (and at times slept with him in the case of Oliver Wendell Holmes). In a sensitive way, Toibin addresses the ambiguous sexuality of Henry, touching reverently and yet sensually on his platonic relationships with a manservant Hammond, his houseboy Burgess Noakes in Rye, England, and his magnetic attraction to the Norwegian sculptor Hendrik Andersen. Yet Toibin devotes equal energy to exploring Henry's long-term friendship with the writer Constance Fenimore Woolson who committed suicide in his beloved Venice, his sister Alice who dies young and has a suggested lesbian relationship, Lady Wolseley who decorates his home in Rye, and his own brother William. Along the way are hints and digressions about novels in gestation and in final form. And as if this tome of information weren't enough to satisfy the reader, Toibin writes with such magnificent prose that the book literally sings. "As an artist, he recognized, Andersen might know, or at least fathom the possibility, that each book he had written became an aspect of him, had entered into his driven spirit and lay there much as the years themselves had done. His relationship with Constance would be hard to explain; Andersen was perhaps too young to know how memory and regret can mingle, how much sorrow can be held within, and how nothing seems to have any shape or meaning until it is past and lost and, even then, how much, under the weight of pure determination, can be forgotten and left aside only to return in the night as a piercing pain." And in the final chapter: " 'The moral?' Henry thought for a moment. 'The moral is the most pragmatic we can imagine, that life is a mystery and that only sentences are beautiful, and that we must be ready for change, especially when we go to Paris, and that no one,' he said, raising his glass, 'who has known the sweetness of Paris can properly return to the sweetness of the United States.' " Erudite, elegant, and sensual. Colm Toibin has mastered it all in this exceptional book. Read it slowly - to absorb over a hundred years of history and the development of the intellect, and to savour the seeds of genius in a great mind. Highly Recommended.
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Bellissimo, di nuovo
Comincio parlando dell'edizione; pur essendo un tascabile, è molto gradevole, in particolar modo a me piace tantissimo la copertina. Buona impaginazione, interlinea ideale, carta un po' troppo sottile e quindi trasparente per i miei gusti ma d'altronde si tratta appunto di un formato economico. La scrittura di Tóibín si può definire in un modo solo: come un universo nel quale ci si trova o meno a proprio agio. A mio giudizio, siamo davanti a un autore maggiore del nostro tempo, che dà il suo meglio quando tratta delle vite degli altri. Libro consigliato senza esitazione. C'è una sua facilità da parte sua nell'indossare la vita di un altro e abitarla intimamente che lascia incantata. Ho un unico rimpianto: di non averlo comprato in prima edizione, e consiglio a chi può di fare senz'altro. Questo autore è un investimento nella vostra libreria.
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What's important to know
If you liked reading Henry James then you will like this book for its written style. If you also like reading biographies you will love it. I
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Henry James
This is really a wonderful book, the portrait of the artist is magnificent, it takes you through his memories as if you were there.
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Worthy buy
The book was good in condition. Thank you.
関連する文学賞
- 国際ダブリン文学賞 第11回(2006年) ・受賞