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The Beast in the Jungle
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The Beast in the Jungle
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The Beast in the Jungle
Ebook101 pages2 hours

The Beast in the Jungle

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Trajectory presents classics of world literature with 21st century features! Our original-text editions include the following visual enhancements to foster a deeper understanding of the work: Word Clouds at the start of each chapter highlight important words. Word, sentence, paragraph counts, and reading time help readers and teachers determine chapter complexity. Co-occurrence graphs depict character-to-character interactions as well character to place interactions. Sentiment indexes identify positive and negative trends in mood within each chapter. Frequency graphs help display the impact this book has had on popular culture since its original date of publication. Use Trajectory analytics to deepen comprehension, to provide a focus for discussions and writing assignments, and to engage new readers with some of the greatest stories ever told.

"The Beast in the Jungle" by Henry James centers around John Marcher and May Bartram who form a strong friendship based on John's fear that some significant event is waiting for him.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 1, 2014
ISBN9781632094933
Author

Henry James

Henry James (1843-1916), the son of the religious philosopher Henry James Sr. and brother of the psychologist and philosopher William James, published many important novels including Daisy Miller, The Wings of the Dove, The Golden Bowl, and The Ambassadors.

Read more from Henry James

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3.5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Beast in the Jungle is a gemlike encapsulation of everything James does so well. Told in a brisk seventy-five pages, the story offers an amount of psychological depth, observation, and insight which most full-length novels don't even approach. Most notable in my opinion, however, is how the story portrays the difficulty of perceiving things rightly (perceiving others, perceiving oneself, and perceiving value) – which is, according to James, precisely the task with which the readers and the writer of his fictions are faced as well. The Beast in the Jungle is perhaps the easiest way in to this distinctive literary vision – short enough to read through in a day, but complex enough to consume a lifetime.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Total complete blather ... crap ... pretentious drivel ... I didn't like it much.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A man is convinced that some event of significance lurks ahead in his future; he has the sense that a purpose awaits him which is yet to be revealed. He makes the acquaintance of a woman his age with whom he shares his secret, who awaits it with him. Much of the story is their conversations about what it might be, and hints emerge that she has predicted its identity. We're missing the source for his certainty that he should anticipate some event, the instigation that led to his identifying this as the core truth of his self-identity. It doesn't harm the story not to have it, but it would have provided a more complete arc. The theme is regret about things not done, opportunities not taken; how one wrong axiom about life can throw the opportunity to make the most of it off kilter. Someone once looked at me just so, and I reacted the same way. It happens that quickly and there is no returning to the moment.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    “It wouldn’t have been failure to be bankrupt, dishonoured, pilloried, hanged; it was failure not to be anything. ”At a party John Marcher meets May Bartram whom he had met many years before. May recalls a strange confession he made on that occasion and so they begin a long, but uncommitted relationship. Marcher is convinced that will he have a great unknown thrust upon him so he is unwilling to commit himself as awaits it. It is only after May's death that he comes to realise what 'the beast in the jungle' really is.In this novella Henry James tries to portray the predicament of all the people who forfeit their allotted share of experience, because of their excessive pride and rationality. Marcher suffers chiefly by not responding to May’s affection. This is not a thrill a minute roller-coaster rather it is a plodding, mature look at wasted lives and as such despite its brevity has hidden depths.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    James is my second favorite writer, after Proust, of course. “The Beast in the Jungle” is probably his most masterful tale—novella or short story, you decide—and it’s one that I’ve read at least twenty times. While many of my readings have been colored by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s now canonical essay “The Beast in the Closet,” this time around I read James’s tale from an entirely new perspective.

    And to me that’s the most marvelous thing about writers like James: one never encounters the same text; one always finds new entry points, threads, and cadences that were lost on the first (or tenth) reading. James’s work is always lucid and at the same time ambiguous, tapping into the ebb and flow of our psychological mindsets; I suppose it’s no wonder that our own psychological states while reading would blind us to the many other complex ideas and structures with which James is working with such laudable skill.

    “The Beast in the Jungle” is the tale of John Marcher, a narrative that pits existential and phenomenological questions of being against the ineluctable nature of language, speech, and what is unnameable. While Marcher is sure that something monstrous is going to happen to him, thus remaining hypervigilant through his entire life in wait for what he calls the beast, James is quick to show how the underlying narcissism that pervades our suffering—and which can blind us to the suffering of others—still courts a desire to be understood, acknowledged, and ultimately known. The analytic relationship between Marcher and May Bartram is one of the most beguiling and yet touching of these sorts of relationships in James’s fiction, perhaps because the sense of intimacy and the threat of the beast are interwoven in a way that causes the textual rhythm to literally pulsate at times (e.g., see the famous ending lines).

    If you are a writer and you’ve never read this, I honestly have no idea what sort of company you’ve been keeping. Not only is “The Beast in the Jungle” one of the very best examples of the short story, but it is also an investigation into the same representational inquiries with which we all deal when trying to nail down words for things that are simply unnameable. And if you’re a reader who has never read this: what on earth are you waiting for?

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