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Alice in Bed: A Novel

por Judith Hooper

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425596,625 (3.5)2
"Arm yourself against my dawn, which may at any moment cast you and Harry into obscurity, Alice James writes her brother William in 1891. In Judith Hooper's magnificent book, zingers such as this fly back and forth between the endlessly articulate and letter-writing Jameses, all of whom are geniuses at gossiping. And the James family did, in fact, know everyone intellectually important on both sides of the Atlantic, but by the time we meet her in 1889, Alice has been sidelined and is lying in bed in Leamington, England, after taking London by storm. We don't know what's wrong with Alice -- no one does, though her brothers have inventive theories -- even the best of medical science offers no help. Her legs no longer support her. She cannot travel home and so is separated from her beloved Katherine. She also suffers fits each day at noon sending her into swooning dreams in which she not so much remembers her life as relives it. So, with Alice in bed, we travel to London and Paris, where the James children spent parts of their unusual childhoods. We sit with her around the James family's dinner table, as she - the youngest and the only girl - listens to the intellectual elite of Boston, missing nothing. We meet her mercurial father, given to visions of angels and firing each governess he hires for her in turn. The book is accompanied by Hooper's Afterword, an essay on the state of medicine encountered by Alice James, preposturous remedies inflicted on Victorian woman as encumbered by infirmity, it seems, as by the privileges of their station. Accompanied by an Afterword that addresses the various maladies that befell not only Alice but others of her caste and class, we find a brilliant woman encumbered by what was perhaps a genetically derived variety of infirmities, some of which will have resonance with the readers of today. "--… (más)
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Mostrando 5 de 5
I gave up on this book after the first 2/3rds and skimmed the remaining 1/3. I have read and enjoyed several novels, several essays, and several short stories by Henry James. I enjoyed them all. But Alice In Bed was simply boring and pointless. ( )
  Michael_Lilly | Oct 28, 2023 |
4.5 I found this hard to put down. I particularly loved the end piece where the author speculates on Alice's physical and psychological states in modern terms.

I was never required to read any Henry James fiction in school. I did try Turn of the Screw recently (not finished) and I think I've picked up some of the novels. But I have the strong sense that this author is holding information over my head, taunting me with the sense that I will never get the joke. ( )
  Je9 | Aug 10, 2021 |
This is an imaginative and witty account of Alice James not just as the invalid sister of her famous brothers. Hooper depicts Alice as passionate, mischievous, intellectual and thoughtful. She is full of ideas and full of life. This a slowly paced novel that reveals much about the James family and their peers as well as the historical era as these were things Alice cared very much about. The dialogue is realistic and the letters included at the end of chapters provide a nice summary of the family happenings and climate. Obviously well researched, Hooper' s crossover to fiction is a success.

Copy provided by TLC Book Tours and Publisher ( )
  hfineisen | May 26, 2016 |
The youngest of five, the only daughter at a time when a woman's role was confined to the domestic sphere, and ailing or invalid much of her life, Alice James is not the James family member that history celebrates and reveres. That honor goes to her better known brothers, William and Henry. But she was a formidable intellect herself, often acknowledged by these famous brothers as the wit of the family. When her diaries were posthumously published, they received wonderful reviews for their thoughtful stance on social issues, her educated yet accessible style, and her incisive insights. Not bad for a woman overshadowed by her brothers by dint of her sex, her constitution, and social conventions. Judith Hooper's novel, Alice in Bed, imagines this witty, smart, unconventional woman, bringing her to life and examining not only her later years, spent entirely inside in bed, but also her life growing up with a famous father and then even more famous brothers.

Opening with Alice confined to her rooms, unable to walk, having frequent "going off" spells, and suffering from a feeling of snakes in the pit of her stomach, the novel moves back and forth from her long term sick bed to her younger years and back again. Via Alice's own narration, the reader feels the unhappiness and disappointment when she is denied the same sorts of freedoms and education that her brothers receive, even as it is clear that Alice idolizes William and Henry. When she does get a boon that she has envied from afar, like going to Europe, it has conditions and strictures that it never had for her brothers. Alice chafes at the bonds of womanhood but she is generally dutiful, even as she rails privately that no one understands her. Only in her choice of love does she embrace the unconventional, that choice remaining mostly secret. Outwardly compliant, Alice is actually rebellious at her core and when sparks of her rebellion bubble to the surface, it alarms her family, but it animates the story. Between her bouts of illness, Alice is quite funny and perceptive. Her poking fun at the pomposity of those around her, mainly those of the Boston elite literati, is sly and on target. Her understanding of social conventions is fascinating to read as she seems oblivious to the effect of her own forthrightness. She is an opinionated and brilliant woman indeed although she is no Angel in the House.

Hooper intersperses snippets from James family letters and excerpts from Alice's own diary into the novel, allowing the real Alice James to blend with her fictional counterpart and to highlight different members of the family's feelings and concerns about her well being and prospects. The author shows the toll that physical and mental illness took on the family as a whole, with Alice not the only chronic sufferer. And she captures the high-toned, interesting, debates between and differing beliefs of family members, especially Alice, on social issues like women's rights and the plight of the poor. Although Alice's outside experiences eventually ceased during her many years of mysterious, undiagnosed illness, she never gave up her curiousity or interest in the world outside her door. The novel is well written and thoughtful, almost entirely character driven. The pacing is slow and deliberate. The cast of characters is not large, as Alice's own world was not large and in fact grew smaller by the year. Readers with an interest in American literature, Boston in the mid to late 1800s, or in the frustrations of such a constrained life for an intelligent woman of the time period will find this an intriguing read. ( )
  whitreidtan | Apr 19, 2016 |
3.5 For her first foray into fiction, non fiction writer Hooper has tackled the insular and well known James family. Narrated by Alice as she attempts to recover from her latest malady at a spa in England, she takes us back and forth into her life as the youngest and only daughter. Plagued most of her life by various ills, an intelligent woman with few outlets, her life is a matter of intellect, always yearning for the freedoms allowed her bothers. In the days before any effective medical treatments, rest cures, mesmerism and as a last resort, institutions were all that were offered. Tonics and supposed medicines contained poisons that taxed an already unhealthy disposition.

Many of the James letters from Henry and William are quoted, their love for their sister evident. Yet, they too suffered from undiagnosed illnesses, mental and physical, took to sanitariums and looked for answers in other ways. Yet, they became successful, even if plagued by demons.

Well written, introspective, a fascinating look at a family that still influence many today. All the famous people they met, their lives and philosophical debates, a book that will prove fascinating for those interested in this family. The author at the end attempts in todays better understood psychiatric diagnoses, to understand the many causes of this family's ills, this family, things that ran in the family bloodline.

I enjoyed this, thought it was a very in depth look with historical backing of a family I was curious about. ( )
  Beamis12 | Jan 7, 2016 |
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Arm yourself against my dawn, which may at any moment cast you and Harry into obscurity.  — Alice James in a letter to William James, 1891
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Henry James
3 Bolton St., W.
November 4th, 1885

To William James
Dr. Garrod, here in London, says that all of Alice's troubles stem from Suppressed Gout.
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"Arm yourself against my dawn, which may at any moment cast you and Harry into obscurity, Alice James writes her brother William in 1891. In Judith Hooper's magnificent book, zingers such as this fly back and forth between the endlessly articulate and letter-writing Jameses, all of whom are geniuses at gossiping. And the James family did, in fact, know everyone intellectually important on both sides of the Atlantic, but by the time we meet her in 1889, Alice has been sidelined and is lying in bed in Leamington, England, after taking London by storm. We don't know what's wrong with Alice -- no one does, though her brothers have inventive theories -- even the best of medical science offers no help. Her legs no longer support her. She cannot travel home and so is separated from her beloved Katherine. She also suffers fits each day at noon sending her into swooning dreams in which she not so much remembers her life as relives it. So, with Alice in bed, we travel to London and Paris, where the James children spent parts of their unusual childhoods. We sit with her around the James family's dinner table, as she - the youngest and the only girl - listens to the intellectual elite of Boston, missing nothing. We meet her mercurial father, given to visions of angels and firing each governess he hires for her in turn. The book is accompanied by Hooper's Afterword, an essay on the state of medicine encountered by Alice James, preposturous remedies inflicted on Victorian woman as encumbered by infirmity, it seems, as by the privileges of their station. Accompanied by an Afterword that addresses the various maladies that befell not only Alice but others of her caste and class, we find a brilliant woman encumbered by what was perhaps a genetically derived variety of infirmities, some of which will have resonance with the readers of today. "--

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