A review by rosekk
The Portrait of a Lady by Henry James

4.0

I was torn between giving the book three or four stars. I opted for four in the end because throughout the time I was reading the book, whenever I had to put it down I was eager to get back to it. It was not without its faults, however. The most aggravating of these is that the book is much longer than it needs to be. James is a great writer who has the capacity to capture an image or a feeling with a short sentence. It's therefore completely unnecessary that he follows up these sentences with further paragraphs of description that add nothing further. If the unnecessary additional description were cut from the book, the story could have been told in half the space. I also found the plot extremely slow and oddly arranged. It feels as though Osmond were introduced far to late in the piece, given his importance which means the first half of the book is a kind of very long drawn out introduction while everything happens in the second half. I also don't understand the focus on Caspar Goodwood. The fact that the story closes on him is not something I've understood yet. Similarly, I haven't worked out what James was trying to do with him - I find him a highly annoying character particularly because although the book seems to set him up as a better alternative for Isabel than the man she chose, every action he takes throughout the story suggests he would be just as bad a husband for all his protests that he loves her. He hates her freedom as much as her husband does, so why the encouragement to see him as a fit rival? The book acknowledges this a tiny bit right at the end, where Isabel answers that she'd return to her husband to get away from Caspar, but I'm still not satisfied with that. Are we to imagine that every possible marriage Isabel could have made would have been poor, and that her only good choice would have been to avoid marriage altogether? I say this since Lord Warburton, though I rather liked him throughout the book, seems to have given up on her at the end and offers her no assistance once he's abandoned the idea of marrying her, which suggests his kindness towards her only lasted as long as he might get something in return... I suppose this is why I liked the book so much in the end. While there are frustrations with the writing style, the characters and the plot it occupies the mind in a certain way; the lives of the characters feel rich enough to warrant this kind of interrogation.