The Pension Beaurepas

audiobook

The Pension Beaurepas

by Henry James

EN·~1 hours

Chapters

Description

The narrator, a struggling writer with modest means, decides to rent a room in the Pension Beaurepas, a modest boarding‑house in Geneva praised for its cheap rates and its reputation as a living laboratory of human nature. Inspired by the likes of Stendhal and Balzac, he hopes the eclectic mix of residents will supply the material he needs for his literary ambitions. The house sits behind a little fountained square, its back entrance opening straight into a bustling kitchen that smells of home‑cooked meals.

Madame Beaurepas, the octogenarian proprietor, runs the place with a pragmatic kindness; half‑deaf and fond of a secret pinch of snuff, she pretends to hear the gossip of her boarders while actually judging them by type rather than by name. Her niece helps, and the sturdy cook Célestine moves about with a ready smile, polishing boots and ferrying luggage for anyone who asks. The residents, ranging from pretentious little‑room tenants to weary travelers, clash and converse under her unflinching rule that modesty outweighs false gentility.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (107K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2001-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Henry James

Henry James

1843–1916

Known for elegant, psychologically rich fiction, this American-born writer explored the tensions between Europe and the United States with unusual depth and subtlety. His novels and tales helped shape modern literary realism, from intimate studies of consciousness to haunting ghost stories.

View all books