The title, like all the rest of the book, is James Agee's own. However, in the opinion of the editors and of the publisher, A Death in the Family is a near-perfect work of art. How much polishing or re-writing he might have done is impossible to guess, for he was a tireless and painstaking writer. It was not a part of the manuscript which Agee left, but the editors would certainly have urged him to include it in the final draft. The short section ' Knoxville: Summer of 1915', which serves as a sort of prologue, has been added. This arrangement also obviated the necessity of the editors having to compose any transitional material. It seemed presumptuous to try to guess where he might have inserted them. It was finally decided to print these in italics and to put them after Parts I and II. The ending of A Death in the Family had been reached sometime before Agee's death, and the only editorial problem involved the placing of several scenes outside the time span of the basic story. There has been no re-writing, and nothing has been eliminated except for a few cases of first-draft material which he later re-worked at greater length, and one section of seven-odd pages which the editors were unable satisfactorily to fit into the body of the novel. This novel, upon which he had been working for many years, is presented here exactly as he wrote it.
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