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04 - Chapter 04

Episode 4 of the Turn of the Screw (version 2), The by Henry James (1843 - 1916) podcast, hosted by LibriVox, titled "04 - Chapter 04" was published on April 19, 2026 and runs 13 minutes.

April 19, 2026 ·13m · Turn of the Screw (version 2), The by Henry James (1843 - 1916)

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Chapter 00

Jan 2, 2026 ·17m

Chapter 01

Jan 1, 2026 ·11m

Chapter 02

Dec 31, 2025 ·10m

Chapter 03

Dec 30, 2025 ·16m

Chapter 04

Dec 29, 2025 ·15m

Chapter 05

Dec 28, 2025 ·11m

Turn of the Screw, The by Henry James (1843 - 1916) LibriVox The Turn of the Screw is a novella written by Henry James. It is a ghost story that was originally published in 1898. A nameless governess reports the events of two ghosts who stalk the young children she has charge over. Is she reliable, or an imaginative neurotic? (Summary adapted from Wikipedia) Turn of the Screw Podcast Kaitlyn Alicia, Martha Iserman A podcast covering art, history, folklore, the strange and the unusual. Each season we will take you through a geographical region and cover history, places, events and people of significance. The Turn of the Screw by Henry James Loyal Books Christmas Eve. Guests round a fireside begin telling each other ghost stories. One of them relates a true incident involving the governess of his little nephew and niece. Strange events begin to take place, involving the housekeeper, a stranger who prowls round the grounds, a mysterious woman dressed in black and an unknown misdemeanor committed by the little nephew.The Turn of the Screw by Henry James was published in 1893 and it remains one of the best-known and admired works of this great American writer. One of the factors that makes it so appealing is that the structure and ending are open to the reader's interpretation. Over the years, many critics, readers and scholars have provided their own theories about the ending and all of them may be valid from a certain viewpoint. However, the real “horror” in this book is the nameless, ambiguous sense of evil that pervades the story and brings out all that is deeply frightening to us.Henry James came from a distinguished family. His Sir Edmund Orme by Henry James (1843 - 1916) LibriVox Henry James wrote a number of ghost stories -- The Turn of the Screw being the most famous. Did he believe in ghosts himself, as did many of his contemporaries? It's generally possible to find earthly interpretations, Freudian and other, for his ghosts. Sir Edmund Orme, though, is unquestionably a real ghost -- except of course that James's unnamed narrator tells the story in the voice of yet a third man, and the narrator himself passes no judgments on the factual nature of what he is reporting (there's a resemblance here to The Turn of the Screw). The story has to do with two love affairs in two generations, and Sir Edmund, real or imagined, plays a role in each. In the end, then, it's still up to the reader to decide on the nature of the ghost, whether he's real or imagined. James gives you no clear answer.(Introduction by Nicholas Clifford))
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