Henry James was born to a lecturer and social theorist, Henry James Sr., and was the second oldest of five children. Throughout James’s childhood, his family moved back and forth between New York, Rhode Island, Paris, and Geneva. He and his brothers received a somewhat haphazard schooling as a result of this constant movement. The James family later settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Henry enrolled at Harvard Law School, though he soon quit. He began to publish stories during the Civil War, and also began contributing to magazines and journals like
The Nation at this time. In 1874 he settled in Italy to write a novel, and then moved to Europe definitively in 1875. He first lived in Paris, where he met authors like Gustave Flaubert and Emile Zola, and then to London. James’s stories and novels began to reach international success, especially following the publication of
The Portrait of a Lady in 1880. James never married, and was certainly attracted to men, although his homosexuality remained hidden from nearly everyone in his life. In the first few years of the twentieth century, James’s “late period,” he published three novels that cemented his legacy:
The Wings of the Dove,
The Ambassadors,
and
The Golden Bowl. After returning to New York in 1905, he began to heavily revise a number of his works and to write literary introductions to them, which are considered exemplary essays in their own right. But despite his critical acclaim, approval from the general public continued to elude him, and he began to be deeply depressed. He recovered and returned to England, living to see the outbreak of World War I, and died in London.