"No one, among American writers, was more contemporary or had a more
powerful grasp of American history and American myth," writes Leon Edel
of Henry James. This collection of James's essays on American letters,
together with some of his miscellaneous writings on other American
subjects, is a pivotal document in the reassessment of James as less
cloistered--and more American--than previously supposed. James is
relaxed and informal as he writes of Emerson, Hawthorne, Lowell, Godkin,
Norton, and Howells: he is fondly recalling--but also criticizing--the
cultural orthodoxy in which he was reared. The American Essays
remarkably prefigures current efforts to revise and challenge the
aesthetic idealism of the Emersonian tradition.