The Education of Henry Adams: A Centennial Version |
| |
| Edited by Edward Chalfant and Conrad Edick Wright |
| 542 pages, 7 x 10 |
| Cloth 978-0-934-909-91-4 $34.95 |
| Paper 978-0-934-909-938 $19.95 |
| Massachusetts
Historical Society
|
 |
Both a winner of the Pulitzer Prize and at the head of the Modern
Library's list of the one hundred best English-language nonfiction
books of the twentieth century, The Education of Henry Adams
has long been revered as a great work of literature. Written by
Adams in the third person, the book became known for founding
a new genre best described as "an education"an
account not of life, but of learning. A tireless historian, politician,
and traveler, Adams was from first to last a dedicated learner
capable of great originality. In this text, Adams uses his background
information (such as place of birth, voyage destinations, and
alma mater) but little else, placing his protagonist in front
of life’s various pitfalls with the object of providing those
stepping out into the world with the tools they need to handle
themselves in the face of adversity. By inventing his own fictional
missteps, Adams allows readers to educate themselves on how to
approach life’s curveballs.
Although The Education of Henry Adams has long been considered
a classic, until now the only editions available were those from
1907 and 1918. The former, which appeared in Adams’s lifetime,
was a private printing of only one hundred copies, containing
hundreds of printer’s errors and editorial inconsistencies. The
latter, printed by the Massachusetts Historical Society and Houghton
Mifflin Company after Adams's death in March of 1918, amounted
to a wholesale modernization of Adams’s work, leaving telling
defects, including stylistic inconsistencies and incomplete sentences.
With The Education of Henry Adams: A Centennial Version,
editors Edward Chalfant and Conrad Edick Wright have at long last
returned this celebrated book to the author's vision. Combining
close attention to the private printing’s typesetting and editorial
shortcomings with valuable insights into the history of the book
and Adams's reasons for writing it, they have also inserted marginal
corrections by Adams in his working copies of the 1907 printing.
With an introductory note, an invitation to readers, and a postscript,
they have both traced the text's own story and offered a compelling
interpretation of the author’s motives.
Edward Chalfant is a Professor of English
Emeritus at Hofstra University and the author of a trilogy on the
life of Henry Adams: Both Sides of the Ocean; Better in Darkness;
and Improvement of the World.
Conrad Edick Wright
is the Ford Editor of Publications at the Massachusetts Historical
Society, where he has been on staff since 1985. He is the author
or coauthor of three books, the editor or coeditor of seven collections
of essays, and the project director for Sibley's Harvard Graduates
and Colonial Collegians: Biographies of Those Who Attended
American Colleges before the War for Independence.