Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Search the LRB

All the words
Exact phrase

advanced search

SUBSCRIBER REGISTRATION

Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here

If you are already registered you can log in from our login page

If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here.

London Review Bookshop

How’s the Empress? subscriber-only content

James Wood

  • The Light of Day by Graham Swift

Rummaging around, in a notebook entry of 1896, for the properly grim place to deposit his unfortunate heroine, Maisie Farange, Henry James alights on Folkestone, and with grey satisfaction asks himself: ‘don’t I get an effect from Folkestone?’ James does indeed get an ‘effect’, in What Maisie Knew, from Folkestone: from the name, from the town, from its seaside hotel, from the ‘cold beef and Apollinaris’ consumed by Maisie and her stepfather.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

James Wood’s How Fiction Works is just out. He is also the author of The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief and is a staff writer at the New Yorker.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Paradise Syndrome
Sukhdev Sandhu: Hanif Kureishi

Post-Paranoid
Michael Wood on Underworld by Don Delillo

Credulity
James Wood: ‘Life of Pi’

One Big Murder Mystery
Adam Shatz on the Algerian army’s leading novelist

Read it on the autobahn
Robert Macfarlane: Vanishing Victorians