Pages

Pages 2

Monday, October 8, 2018

RIP XIII: The Turn of the Screw by Henry James


Someone has mentioned to me that The Turn of the Screw is 'interesting'. Normally a gothic-horror-ghost story is labeled as scary or dark, rarely interesting. But after finishing the book for R.I.P XIII challenge, I agree that this book is, indeed, interesting!

The Turn of the Screw is a novella (my copy contains 96 pages—excluding introduction and preface). And if you are familiar with Henry James' flowery writing style, believe me, other writers would have written it much shorter! However, the discussion that might follow the reading would be very long...

In short, the story is narrated by a man who was telling a story to his friends 'round the fire' on a Christmas Eve. It was a queer story he got from his friend, a young woman who was hired by a gentleman to be a governess. The gentleman is a bachelor who had been left guardian for his orphan niece and nephew in a country home called Bly in Essex. He specifically instructed the governess to never bother him for any trouble whatsoever. Arriving at Bly, our governess found a nice housekeeper, a sweet little girl called Flora, and a letter from the boy's school, announcing that Miles (the boy) was expelled from school; although Mrs. Grose the housekeeper said he is a sweet child who won't trouble anyone. Then series of queer things unrolled one after another that distressed the governess: supernatural apparitions of a man (not a gentleman) and a woman, who Mrs. Grose pointed as the late servant (Peter Quint) and governess (Miss Jessel). Then there were also the two sweet children, whom the governess knew have seen and communicated with the ghosts, but never told her anything.

Things got complicated when Mrs. Grose revealed that Peter Quint and Miss Jessel have made a scandalous love affair. Our heroine also realised that Mrs. Grose could not see the apparitions! The sweet children then started to behave cunningly, and our heroine suspected that it was the dead lovers who brought evil influence to them when they made contact with the poor children. Bad things turned to worse, and the story ended abruptly by a sudden death of someone in the house.

Many believe that the ghosts only existed in the governess' mind (because Mrs. Grose never saw it), and that the whole story was only the product of her hallucination. Is it so? Mrs. Grose did not see the apparition, and has never confirmed the governess' suspicion. One tangible proof is the letter from school. It could have proven that Miles had turned evil and done wicked things to his friends. However, Mrs. Grose could not read, so she could not confirm either.


The only subject she positively agreed with the governess is the bad character of Peter Quint and Miss Jessel. But what would it prove? So, all in all, I think James purposely created an intricate condition, of which we could not find single evidence that: a) there were ghosts, and b) the children turned evil from the ghosts’ evil influences. James just wanted this story to be ambiguous, and to make the readers debating forever, perhaps? He succeeded if that’s what he wanted.

Anyway, it is a nice gothic ghost story, and certainly very interesting. However, James' writing style sometimes washed away the spookiness of the story, and left only the interesting bit.

3,5 / 5



12 comments:

  1. I almost picked this up to read last week. Instead I started James’s Portrait of a Lady. This world have been more seasonal. It also sounds so very good. I hope to get to it soon.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Actually I liked Portrait of a Lady better than this one. But James' works and readers are always a love-hate relationship, so I am really curious how you would take Portrait... :)

      Delete
  2. I went back and reread my posts on this novella after reading your review. James is not for me, and I think he actually botched the story somewhat, but I loved the premise and the ambiguity of the story.
    >James' writing style sometimes washed away the spookiness of the story

    I totally agree with your assessment on this.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agree, Jane! The story and ambiguity would have made a perfect ghost story; but for the writing style... I had to read the looong sentences twice to get his meaning (and usually while constructing the shorter and simpler way to say it!) -_-

      Delete
  3. Hey, if it's not too spooky, I might read it this month! Thanks for the review. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's like when someone tries too hard to explain something to you with double sentences, that made you only puzzled in the end... :P

      Delete
  4. I say listen to it! Emma Thompson narrates the story and it was that much better.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good idea! Thanks, Heather... I might try someday.

      Delete
  5. Seeing this title always brings me back to college. I have vivid memories of reading it and discussing it in one of my first college lit classes. Seems a lot of folks say that the whole thing is basically about sex. I'm gathering you do not prescribe to that school of interpretive thought on this one. I am going to ahve to dig up the paper I wrote about it back then and see what the hell we were on about.

    Happy reading!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Nikki, yes, I did not get chance to discussing classic books back in school. I'm curious about that sex interpretation you were talking about, because I didn't see the conenction. I have, actually, thought that the children could have been Peter Quint's & Miss Jessel's. But as the ending is hanging like that, I was not so sure. Is that what you mean?

      Delete
  6. I just read a book with Henry James as one of the characters. In this novel by Dan Simmons, the author describes James as trying to make the reader increasingly nervous about whether the governess was unstable and corrupting the children's minds or there was actually a presence. I must have been too young when I read it, but I always assumed there were actual ghosts - the ambiguity was sort of lost on me!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I, too, have not thought there's any ambiguity. I thought the story was reasonable enough. But then I read some online articles, and only then that I realised, that if I viewed the ghost from the housekeeper's view, there was gap enough.

      I think I might be interested in that novel by Dan Simmons you mentioned. Never heard of him before, but will take a look soon. Thanks, Priya..

      Delete

What do you think?