The Turn of the Screw (Dover Thrift Editions)

by Henry James
The Turn of the Screw (Dover Thrift Editions)  
published 1991 by The Modern Library
first published 1898
binding Paperback
isbn 0486266842   (isbn13: 9780486266848)
pages 96
description The story starts conventionally enough with friends sharing ghost stories 'round the fire on Christmas Eve. One of the guests tells about a governess ...more
date added
05-01-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 3152)



Steven
01/23/08

bookshelves: 1001
Read in April, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Toryssa
Read in April, 2007
I absolutely loved this. There is quite a lot of controversy linked with this story, and what was really happening. Was their really evil? Was the Governess mad?

The end is rather inconclusive and leaves the reader to decide for themselves.

I thought it was very compelling and well written. James did a really good job of writing from a young woman’s perspective. Especially at the beginning I found her incredibly endearing and oh-so-GIRLY. Over a hundred years later, and it’s still quit...more
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Shiloh
04/26/08

Read in January, 2005
So I did give this a reread because I was intrigued by the governess as crazy approach that seems to be taken for granted. Again, I did not get that feeling. I do feel that she is perhaps being driven mad by the ghosts or, even possibly, by diabolical young children. And I do think she gets obsessive and neurotic as the sexually repressed, socially disadvantaged woman of her day did do under similar strains (the life of a governess was a special kind of hell all its own.) But I also think th...more
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Kelly
Kelly rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
11/07/07

bookshelves: brit-lit, fiction
Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: brit lit fans, people who like psychological readings of texts
Creepy. Twisty-turny. Ghosts. Weird kids. Unreliable, possibly insane narrator. Henry James, is there no genre that you will not poke your head into?

No, really. It's interesting though. On the surface, this story is perfect to curl up by the fire with on a cold winter's night. Which is exactly how the book is framed, by the way. As a story told in front of a fireside on a cold winter's night. It's short, it reads quickly, and is open to pretty much whatever you want to make of it. James let...more
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Aerin
08/01/07

bookshelves: lit-ra-chur
Read in August, 2007
I must admit that it was not on the recommendation of my much-admired 10th-grade English teacher, nor the lengthy, laudatory discussion of it in the introduction of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, one of my favorite books, that got me to pick this one up. No, it's because it was featured as a plot point on Lost, and holy crap, do I love that show.

This is a short novella with a deceptively simple pl...more
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Heidi
02/11/08

bookshelves: literature
Read in December, 2007
Guests gather around the fire on Christmas eve and tell ghost stories. One, Douglas, was not so impressed as the others. He says, "But it's not the first occurence of its charming kind that I know to have been concerned with a child. If the child gives the effect of another turn of the screw, what do you say to <em>two</em> children--?"

"We say, of course," somebody exclaimed, "that two children give two turns! Also that we want to hear about them.&qu...more

"We say, of course," somebody exclaimed, "that two children give two turns! Also that we want to hear about them."

Thus in the first page you find out why this title. The narrator claims he must send for the pages about the two children, written by his sister's governess, and dead for twenty years. He claims she was "awfully clever and nice." The story was of her first experience as a governess, and her encounter with ghosts having a strange connection to her two charges.


James referred to Bluebeard as the inspiration of the story.

Debates continue to this day as to whether there were ghosts, or the woman was mad, this due to the fine craft of Henry James. I lean toward the madness angle, but I'm not sure. It's worth reading again, it could depend on the reader's state of mind at the time.

I'm still wondering about the significance of the tale-telling at Christmas time....less

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Commonpeople
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for: patient readers and lovers of ghost stories
It's been over a hundred years since Henry James' novella was published. I'm sure readers at the time were spooked by its tale of ghosts threatening the innocence of two children, and the attempts of a quasi-hysterical governess to save them. It was that period of the Victorian era when séances and ghosts were popular, when spiritists promised to bridge the road between the living and the dead. People enjoyed sitting around a fire and sharing ghost stories, specially during Christmas time.

B...more
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snackywombat
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: gothic fiction fans
I decided to read this book as part of the RIP Autumn Reading Challenge (http://minusspine.wordpress.co... even though I've never been a huge Henry James fan, but it seems that James' talent lay in the gothic fiction realm rather than the searing social commentaries that he attempted in books like "Daisy Miller," which confusingly both celebrated and attacked products of Victorian society like h...more
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Danine
06/25/08

Read in June, 2008
recommended to Danine by: Annika
I can see the Jane Eyre resemblance in this novel. The Anne Radcliffe reference was beautifully obvious and I enjoyed this ghost story. I also let myself get very emotional which I'm sure Henry James intended.

When Miles gets expelled and the governess is seduced by his cherub charms I knew something was up with 'lil Miles. I couldn't mentally confirm if the children were messing with their new governess or if they were truly under the influence of the ghostly lovers. I think Henry Jame...more
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Steven
04/17/08

bookshelves: novels
I read this one because a book of criticism I’m going to read has a lengthy essay that analyses James’s techniques and several critical responses. Interesting how James reinforces the ambiguity by beginning with what appears to be a frame, although it turns out not to be one because the narrative within the narrative is not enclosed at the end. Early on James creates narrative tension by sticking close to the protagonist’s thought processes, even in the midst of scenes. This strategy is pa...more
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Andrea
07/07/07

Read in May, 2007
Henry James is tough and I find his text to be pretty convoluted. I have this "joke": the average letter count/word in this book is about 9. Of course, it's not, but I vaguely remember the need to read this book with a dictionary. That probably only makes me less educated.
It's also old, so the ghost story is not at all thrilling or causing a "page-turner" status. The same thing happens over and over again and it's "scary", all to arrive at an ambiguous climax that...more
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Ashley
07/30/07

Moment of honesty: I read this book because I needed some fiction to read before bed, and the novels I wanted to start weren't in at the library yet. It was only 85 pages, so I thought it would be quick. Who in their right mind thinks that James will be a quick read? I like James, but even I realize that his prose is dense and prone to long, boring descriptions. And here's another moment of honesty: As I read this, I kept thinking, "This would be such a great novel if it were written by...more
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Vanessa
bookshelves: personal-favs-
recommends it for: those in need of a scare
This novel truly scared me!! I read it in my AP english class and it gave me goosebumps the whole entire time. We also got a chance to watch a movie version, I believe done by PBS. This movie was the greatest version I had ever seen and it still creeps me out to this day!! I loved this type of suspense rather then just graphic horror. Besides, the brilliance of this novel lies in the fact that you never quite figure out/understand what you are suppose to fear or what the evil presences is. Rathe...more
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Scott
06/30/08

bookshelves: britain, literature, victoriana
Read in June, 2008
Henry James' novella Turn of the Screw (1898), unlike most ghost stories, gets better and creepier with each reading ... and, what's truly odd, for me, it got longer, too! The first time I read it, I breezed through it during a chilly Sunday afternoon, and I remember being really disappointed with the ending. This time, I took three days to work through it, almost reading the story to myself aloud, just to make sense of James' fractured style. This slow, deliberate reading really brought ...more
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Rachael
Read in June, 2008
This book is interesting for its unreliable narrator, leaving the reader to draw his or her own conclusions, but the prose sort of left me cold. James is famous for his long and convoluted sentences and I think in this case they detracted from the suspense and atmosphere. The most interesting part for me was seeing the children's actions interpreted through the governess's eyes - she reads so much into them that perhaps isn't there and they come across as really creepy. I found the little boy Mi...more
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Amy
03/04/08

bookshelves: past-read
recommended to Amy by: My wonderful Gothic Lit. teacher
I read this in college, in a Gothic Literature course that enriched my life so much. Everything I read in that course, including this spooky little story, stays with me to this day.

In particular, if anybody watches "Lost" on Thursday nights on ABC, you'll see several references to the Gothic device of duality. I'm absolutely enamored of the series; I've watched it since the first season, and I never cease to be amazed by the constant dualism that pops up.

"Lost" has ma...more
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jacky
03/31/07

bookshelves: classroom-library, own
Read in January, 2002
recommended to jacky by: Lynn Parker
I remember reading this on a train, but can't remember where the train was going to. I had interest in reading this story because my professor for Lit Studies, which is like an intro to analyzing literature, used a portion of this to work on our close reading skills. She gave us only a couple of paragraphs and no background knowledge and we were to figure out what was happening as best we could. That peaked my interest about the rest of the book, however, it was a let down for me. It was too...more
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Allison
Read in September, 2007
I actually listened to the Librivox audiobook of this, which was a really interesting way to read it. I tend to "skim" while I'm reading, so I only pick out the major plot points and don't take a lot of it in. As an audiobook, it was much more suspenseful and allowed me to sort of marinate in the tone of it.

That said, I loved it right up to the end, because I had heard just enough about the story to think there was a twist ending, and enjoyed all the spooky lead-up. But actually, a...more
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A
12/11/07

recommends it for: people who are REALLY good at literary analysis or have a genius for an English teacher
James' terrifying novel makes its mark on its readers by crawling under their skin and evoking every worry and fear of themselves and of whatever hidden characteristics may lie within them. The horror is hidden in the context of every word and phrase, and once the reader digs deeper into their meaning, it is impossible not to be at least somewhat frightened. While the horrific elements are not as blatant as those of Poe's stories, they are equally disturbing in their own way, making for a decide...more
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Melissa
bookshelves: thenovella
Read in February, 2007
The story begins with a frame: someone will read a letter to a group of people, which details the most horrible ghost story any of them have ever heard. James never returns to this frame at the end.

The actual story is told from the point of view of the new governess, sent to take care of Flora and Miles. The governess discovers that the ghosts of the former governess and her lover have been appearing to the children, turning them into liars and hypocrits.

The novella is filled with dram...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.55 (2582 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.47 (333 ratings)
number of reviews: 235






other editions

The Turn of the Screw (Penguin Popular Classics)
The Turn of the Screw: Authoritative Text, Contexts, Criticism (Norton Critical Editions)
The Turn of the Screw (Hardcover)