Description
Edith Wharton's masterpiece brings to life the grandeur and hypocrisy of a gilded age. Set among the very rich in 1870s New York, it tells the story of Newland Archer, a young lawyer engaged to marry virginal socialite May Welland, when he meets her cousin, Countess Ellen Olenska, a woman unbound by convention and surrounded by scandal. As all three are drawn into a love triangle filled with sensuality, subtlety, and betrayal, Archer faces a harrowing choice between happiness and the social code that has ruled his life. The resulting tale of thwarted love is filled with irony and surprise, struggle and acceptance. Recipient of the first Pulitzer Prize for fiction ever awarded to a woman, this great novel paints a timeless portrait of "society" still unmatched in American literature--an arbitrary, capricious social elite that professes inviolable standards but readily abandons them for greed and desire.
Author: Edith Wharton
Publisher: Bantam Classics
Published: 01/01/1996
Pages: 320
Binding Type: Mass Market Paperbound
Weight: 0.36lbs
Size: 7.00h x 4.24w x 0.73d
ISBN13: 9780553214505
ISBN10: 0553214500
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Classics
- Fiction | Literary
- Fiction | Romance | Historical | 20th Century
Author: Edith Wharton
Publisher: Bantam Classics
Published: 01/01/1996
Pages: 320
Binding Type: Mass Market Paperbound
Weight: 0.36lbs
Size: 7.00h x 4.24w x 0.73d
ISBN13: 9780553214505
ISBN10: 0553214500
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Classics
- Fiction | Literary
- Fiction | Romance | Historical | 20th Century
About the Author
The upper stratum of New York society into which Edith Wharton was born in 1862 provided her with an abundance of material as a novelist but did not encourage her growth as an artist. Educated by tutors and governesses, she was raised for only one career: marriage. But her marriage, in 1885, to Edward Wharton was an emotional disappointment, if not a disaster. She suffered the first of a series of nervous breakdowns in 1894. In spite of the strain of her marriage, or perhaps because of it, she began to write fiction and published her first story in 1889.

