The Reverberator

The Reverberator

Infobox Book |
name = The Reverberator


image_caption = Cover of 1989 Oxford World's Classics edition of "A London Life" and "The Reverberator"
author = Henry James
country = United Kingdom, United States
language = English
genre = Novel
publisher = Macmillan and Co., London, New York City
release_date = 05 June, 1888
media_type = Print (Hardback & Paperback)
pages = Volume one, 190; volume two, 207
isbn = NA

"The Reverberator" is a short novel by Henry James, first published as a serial in "Macmillan's Magazine" in 1888 and then as a book later the same year. Accurately described by the [http://www.newpaltz.edu/~hathaway leading web authority] on Henry James as a "a delightful Parisian bonbon," this graceful comedy traces the complications that result when nasty but true stories about a Paris family get into the American scandal sheet of the novel's title.

Plot summary

George Flack is the Paris correspondent for a sleazy American scandal sheet called (surprise!) "The Reverberator". Francie Dosson, a pretty but not always tactful American girl, confides to Flack some gossip about the Proberts, the Frenchified (but originally American) family of her fiancée, Gaston Probert.

Predictably to everybody except Francie, the nasty gossip winds up in "The Reverberator", much to the horror of the stuffy Proberts. Francie makes no attempt to hide her role in giving Flack the juicy details. Gaston is initially dismayed by his fiancée's indiscretions. But with the somewhat surprising support of his sister Suzanne, he decides to accept Francie, who never tries to shift the blame to Flack. Gaston stands up to the outraged members of his family and marries his fiancée.

Key themes

James had no love for publicity himself, so he doesn't spare Francie's gaucherie in blabbing about the Proberts' dirty laundry. On the other hand, he doesn't mind drubbing the stick-necked snobbery of many members of the Probert family. In the last analysis James clearly sides with his heroine and grants her a happy ending.

Flack, the archetypical newspaperman who can't wait to splatter the latest gossip in newsprint, comes in for a predictable trashing by James. "For the convenience of society" in identifying Flack, says James, "he ought always to have worn something conspicuous - a green hat or a yellow necktie." Francie has divided critics somewhat. She's honest and appealing but also naive to a fault. Gaston wavers and hesitates like many a Jamesian male, but he eventually does the right thing.

Critical evaluation

Even the ever-critical William James liked his younger brother's work in this "Parisian bonbon." Almost everybody concedes the novel's charm, but some have demurred at the slightness of the material. Of course, after the critical failure of "The Bostonians" and "The Princess Casamassima", James might have been gun-shy about weightier topics.

In the "New York Edition" preface James calls the novel a "jeu d’esprit" and "so slight a composition." But he then launches into a long, dense discussion of the structure, origins and characters of the book. Let's just say that the book is a lot more fun to read than the preface, even if it's hardly of the first importance among James' works.

References

* "The Novels of Henry James" by Edward Wagenknecht (New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1983) ISBN 0-8044-2959-6
* "The Novels of Henry James" by Oscar Cargill (New York: Macmillan Co., 1961)

External links

* [http://www2.newpaltz.edu/~hathawar/reverberator.html The New York Edition text of "The Reverberator" (1908)]
* [http://www.henryjames.org.uk/prefaces/text13_inframe.htm Author's preface to the "New York Edition" text of "The Reverberator" (1908)]
* [http://www.loa.org/volume.jsp?RequestID=58&section=notes Note on the various texts of "The Reverberator"] at the Library of America web site


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