The Best Henry James Stories Everyone Should Read

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

Henry James (1843-1916) was a prolific writer of short stories and novellas โ€“ what he himself called โ€˜talesโ€™ โ€“ and a number of them are widely read and studied. In this post, weโ€™ve picked just five of Jamesโ€™s very best tales, and said a little bit about them.

โ€˜The Beast in the Jungleโ€™.

In this longer tale from 1903 โ€“ itโ€™s so long it is sometimes categorised as a โ€˜novellaโ€™ โ€“ Henry James uses his interest in delay (enacted so well by his meandering and clause-ridden syntax) to explore a friendship between a man and a woman which never turns into a romantic relationship because the man, John Marcher, fears that something terrible is going to befall him.

His stalwart and patient female companion, May, stands by his side and tries to help him make sense of this mysterious and imprecise threat which he feels hangs over him. Will this โ€˜beastโ€™ lurking in the jungle of his unconscious ever be unleashed? Perhaps Jamesโ€™s finest example of a subversion of the traditional love story.

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The Best Virginia Woolf Stories Everyone Should Read

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

Previously, weโ€™ve picked the best of Virginia Woolfโ€™s novels and non-fiction works, but she was also a fine writer of very short stories. Although Woolf didnโ€™t write a great amount of short fiction, a number of her short stories are classic examples of early twentieth-century modernism. All five stories are included in The Mark on the Wall and Other Short Fiction (Oxford Worldโ€™s Classics), which is a treasure-trove of very short modernist fiction by one of the twentieth centuryโ€™s greatest writers.

โ€˜The Mark on the Wallโ€™.

In this short story, the narrator tells us about a mark she noticed on the wall; what follows is, essentially, is eight pages of stream of consciousness as we follow the narratorโ€™s thoughts, memories, and daydreams. The mark on the wall is jumping-off-point, but the โ€˜lifeโ€™ of the story resides in what goes on in the narratorโ€™s mind: Woolf is telling us that the material world is not everything, since there is an almost spiritual delight in the life of the mind which conventional fiction seldom takes into account. The rock group Modest Mouse took their band name from a phrase in this story.

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The Best D. H. Lawrence Stories Everyone Should Read

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930) wrote novels, short stories, and poems, among many other things. Although he died in his mid-forties โ€“ from tuberculosis โ€“ he was a prolific writer who left behind a vast body of work, including many short stories. Below, weโ€™ve picked five of Lawrenceโ€™s very best short stories, and said a little bit about each of them.

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The Best James Joyce Stories Everyone Should Read

By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University)

James Joyceโ€™s collection Dubliners (1914) was not an initial commercial success. It sold just 379 copies in its first year of publication, and 120 of those were bought by Joyce himself. Yet Dubliners redefined the short story and is now viewed as a classic work of modernist fiction, with each of its fifteen short stories repaying close analysis. Here are five of Joyceโ€™s very best stories from Dubliners.

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