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"The Middle Years" is a short story by Henry James, first published in Scribner's Magazine in 1893. The novelist in the tale speculates that he has spent his whole life learning how to write, so a second life would make sense, "to apply the lesson."
The Middle Years is an incomplete book of autobiography by Henry James, posthumously published in 1917. The book covers the early years of James' residence in Europe and his meetings with writers such as George Eliot , Alfred Tennyson , and James Russell Lowell .
Henry James: The Middle Years 1882–1895 by Leon Edel (1962) ISBN 0-380-39669-6; Henry James: The Treacherous Years 1895–1901 by Leon Edel (1969) ISBN 0-380-39677-7; Henry James: The Master 1901–1916 by Leon Edel (1972) ISBN 0-380-39677-7; Henry James: A Life by Leon Edel (1985) ISBN 0060154594. One-volume abridgment of Edel's five-volume ...
Henry James: The Untried Years 1843–1870 (1953) Henry James: Selected Fiction (Everyman's Library [New American Edition], no. 649A, 1953) The Psychological Novel, 1900-1950 (1955) Literary Biography (1957) Henry James: The Conquest of London 1870–1881 (1962) ISBN 0-380-39651-3; Henry James: The Middle Years 1882–1895 (1962) ISBN 0-380-39669-6
The Middle Years (unfinished, published posthumously 1917) Notebooks ... The Henry James Collection From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library ...
Pages in category "Short stories by Henry James" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. ... The Middle Years; Mrs. Medwin; N. The Next Time ...
The Awkward Age is a novel by Henry James, first published as a serial in Harper's Weekly in 1898–1899 and then as a book later in 1899. Originally conceived as a brief, light story about the complications created in her family's social set by a young girl coming of age, the novel expanded into a general treatment of decadence and corruption in English fin de siècle life.
The Notebooks weren't published until 1947, when they appeared in a heavily annotated edition compiled by F. O. Matthiessen and Kenneth Murdock. The editors pointed out notebook entries that eventually turned into finished works by James, and then went beyond that simple editorial function to discuss and evaluate the works themselves.