Showing posts with label Edith Wharton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edith Wharton. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Ethan Frome

This painting, Home at Montclair by George Inness (interestingly, from the collection at the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown), is shown on the front cover of the Signet Classic edition of Ethan Frome and is a perfect image for the setting and events of the book: bleak, cold, dark and offering little hope for momentary joy, let alone release.  Well, what the heck - it's Edith Wharton!  

Starkfield (!), Massachussetts is a rare departure from Wharton's usual metropolitan world of wealth and privilege, but the theme is again how chance circumstances of life can crush the hopes of an individual, in this case, Ethan Frome, an admirable and likable character who meets and accepts an inexorable and cruel fate.  The book is simply and beautifully written - and very sad. 

Sunday, November 29, 2009

The Age of Innocence


This is the second Edith Wharton novel I've read, in Folio editions. Lovely books, with wonderful illustrations, but Wharton's critiques of Old New York Society are severe, with likable, if flawed, people being directed or even crushed by forces beyond their control. Age of Innocence, beautifully and powerfully written, does end on a more balanced note than House of Mirth, which was truly tragic. Recommended.