(1914), the second volume of Henry James’s autobiographical writings, was published a year after the first,
A Small Boy and Others(1913). The third, the unfinished
The Middle Years(1917), was posthumously published. They were edited by Frederick W. Dupee and published under the title
Henry James: Autobiographyin 1956.
Notes of a Son and Brotherpicks up the mazy chronological web from
A Small Boy and Others, which concluded, rather confusingly (having in the penultimate pages dwelt on his convalescence), with James’ physical collapse at the onset of typhus in Boulogne in 1857 when he was fourteen.
Notes of a Son and Brother opens in Switzerland in 1859, where the family settled for a while in Geneva, having briefly returned to Newport, Rhode Island, in
2137 words
Citation: Righelato, Pat. "Notes of a Son and Brother". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 14 July 2007 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=3207, accessed 22 November 2024.]