On the brink of a promising career, ambitious young author Paul Overt is thrilled when he is introduced to the celebrated novelist Henry St. George, and even more so when the older man — although now considered to be past his prime — takes him under his wing.
St. George is full of wise counsel for the young writer, and following his stern warnings to cultivate solitude and independence in order to not squander his talents, Paul leaves for Europe, where he immerses himself in his work. On his return, however, he is greeted with a devastating discovery.
With an ending that is both ironic and deeply ambiguous, Henry James’s exquisite novella The Lesson of the Master is an extended meditation on marriage, sacrifice, and artistic integrity.
Over de auteur
Colm Tóibín is one of Ireland’s leading contemporary writers. His latest novel, The Master (2004), was shortlisted for the 2004 Man Booker Prize for Fiction and, in 2006, won the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.