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2023-10-12
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¡°A Young Boy and Others¡± is the autobiography of Henry James, first published in 1913. It is the first book in the author¡¯s autobiography series, and includes ¡°Notes of a Son and Brother¡± (1914) and the unfinished work ¡°The Middle Years.¡± continues.
"A Young Boy and a Stranger" is not only an account of James' early life, but also an exploration of the nature of memory, identity, and artistic creation. It shows James' ability to weave complex stories, even when recalling his own past.

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Summary
This is a quote from the book that summarizes James' approach to writing his autobiography.
¡°I have always been more interested in the act of perceiving than in what is perceived. ¡°I was more interested in the mind that felt and saw rather than the object that was felt and seen.¡±
This quote suggests that James is more interested in exploring his own thoughts and feelings than providing a factual account of his life. He is interested not only in his destination but also in the process of self-discovery.

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Contents

CHAPTER I. In the attempt to place together some particulars of the early life
CHAPTER II. We were day-boys
CHAPTER III. But I positively dawdle and gape here
CHAPTER IV. It took place in the house of our cousins Robert
CHAPTER V. The not very glorious smoke of the Mexican War
CHAPTER VI. I see a small and compact and ingenuous society
CHAPTER VII. Dimly queer and "pathetic" to me
CHAPTER VIII. I feel that at such a rate I remember too much
CHAPTER IX. The truth is doubtless, however
CHAPTER X. It was at all events the good lady's disappearance
CHAPTER XI. I am, strictly speaking, at this point
CHAPTER XII. I turn round again to where I last left
CHAPTER XIII. Let me hurry, however
CHAPTER XIV. It must have been after the Sing-Sing episode
CHAPTER XV. It is to the Institution Vergnes
CHAPTER XVI. I must in some degree have felt it a charm
CHAPTER XVII. I lose myself, of a truth
CHAPTER XVIII. I have nevertheless the memory of a restless relish of al
CHAPTER XIX. I try at least to recover here, however
CHAPTER XX. My own sense of the great matter
CHAPTER XXI. How shall I render certain other impressions coming back
CHAPTER XXII. Little else of that Parisian passage remains with me
CHAPTER XXIII. We were still being but vaguely "formed,"
CHAPTER XXIV. Good Robert Thompson was followed by fin M. Lerambert
CHAPTER XXV. That autumn renewed, I make out
CHAPTER XXVI. I allude of course in particular here to the ©¡sthetic clue in general
CHAPTER XXVII. I see much of the rest of that particular Paris time
CHAPTER XXVIII. There comes to me, in spite of these memories
CHAPTER XXIX. I feel that much might be made of my memories