
In the summer of 1907 a young woman in Whitehall finds herself thrust into the orbit of one of literature’s most enigmatic figures. When Henry James arrives in London seeking an amanuensis, she seizes the chance, impresses him with rapid typing, and is invited to join him at his modest home in Rye. The opening pages capture that first bewildering interview, describing James’s surprising physical presence—a sea‑captain‑like silhouette softened by the Italian sun—and the mixture of authority and curiosity that surrounds him.
From that point the narrative follows her as she settles into the green‑painted workroom of Lamb House, observing daily routines, his thoughts on the dullness of country life, and the ways his personality seeps into the pages he dictates. The memoir offers an intimate glimpse of James not as a distant literary icon but as a man negotiating ordinary demands of work, hospitality, and his own self‑image. Listeners will feel as if they are sitting across from him, hearing his deliberate speech and watching the quiet drama of his world unfold.
Language
en
Duration
~58 minutes (56K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laura Natal Rodrigues at Free Literature (Images generously made available by Hathi Trust.)
Release date
2020-10-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1881–1961
Best known as Henry James’s secretary and literary assistant, she built a remarkable career close to the center of early 20th-century literary life. She later wrote her own memoir and criticism, leaving a vivid record of the writers and artistic circles she knew.
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