James's tales can be traps and ruses; they can also be complex self-descriptions in which his own fears and desires have full reign' Frances Wilson, from her Preface to The Beast in the Jungle & Other Tales This collection is made up of the later works in Henry James's repertoire, into which he threw the full weight of his creative fears - notably those concerned with the life he missed out on while distilling his experiences into literature. The stories explore the stairwells of the mind, where consciousness is figured as a place, where one could, terrifyingly, encounter one's alter ego. Tales such as 'The Beast in the Jungle' and 'The Jolly Corner' in this collection are such horror stories of the self. James' obsession with confrontation and escape is evident throughout this volume, often with marriage as the central tenet, as in 'The Bench of Desolation'. They are not without comedy, however, as with the wild goose chase which makes up the central narrative in 'The Figure in the Carpet'. The stories are: The Figure in the Carpet (1896) The Real Right Thing (1899) The Great Good Place (1900) Maud-Evelyn (1900) The Two Faces (1900) The Beldonald Holbein (1901) The Story in It (1902) Flickerbridge (1902) The Beast in the Jungle (1903) The Papers (1903) The Jolly Corner (1908) A Round of Visits (1910) Frances Wilson has selected these eleven stories and provided an original introduction to James's work.
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