Why did I love this book?
This novel is in the POV of Henry James, following him around England and the world during the last years of his life, watching him pick up threads of inspiration for his stories. The reader is privy to his awful, slow awareness of how he had irreparably hurt the women in his life, including his sister.
And yet, he defends the selfishness he needed to do his art. Written in his style, which he referred to as “The Mystery of the Self,” you have to love his writing to love this book, and I did. Some people don’t.
Best quote from one of the women, in an argument about sermons and fiction: “When you close The Mill on the Floss, you know much more about how strange and beautiful it is to be alive than when you read a thousand sermons.”
5 authors picked The Master as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
Nineteenth-century writer Henry James is heartbroken when his first play performs poorly in contrast to Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" and struggles with subsequent doubts about his sexual identity.