Edith Wharton
2) Ethan Frome
The novel is framed...
5) Summer
American author Edith Wharton composed "The Glimpses of the Moon" after the end of World War I. Wharton began to work on it within a year after receiving the Pulitzer Prize in May 1921 for "The Age of Innocence." The novel was published in August 1922, and the following spring she made her last trip to...
First published in 1900, "The Touchstone" was American writer Edith Wharton's first novella and also the first of her many stories describing life in old New York.
"The Touchstone" already shows off the skills Wharton became famous for in novels such as "The House of Mirth" (1905) and "Ethan Frome"...
Originally published in 1912, "The Reef" is a novel by American writer Edith Wharton that came in the middle of her novel-writing career. It came after the triumph of "The House of Mirth" and before her Pulitzer Prize-winning turn with "The Age of Innocence."
Set in and around London, "The Reef" is a story of...
Originally published in 1916, "Bunner Sisters" is a novella by American author Edith Wharton. Inexplicably, this work has had a long history of being overlooked. Rejected twice by Scribner's because of its length and its 'being unsuitable to serial publication', it was eventually published in the...
In this classic by the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Age of Innocence, a mother’s past complicates her daughter’s future in 1920s New York.
Trapped in an unhappy marriage with a controlling husband, Kate Clephane began an affair with a wealthy man, only to lose her daughter, Anne, and be exiled from New York society. Years later, after their entanglement has ended, Kate meets Chris Fenno in France. Although
...12) Twilight Sleep
Originally published in 1903, "Sanctuary" is a unique novel by American author Edith Wharton. Written while she was writing "The House of Mirth," "Sanctuary" is a little hidden gem of Wharton's, with impeccable prose and moments when the suspense becomes almost unbearable.
"Sanctuary" tells the story of...
"Crucial Instances" is Edith Wharton's classic 1901 short story collection, the second collection of short fiction of her career.
The collection consists of six entertaining works of short fiction, and one dialogue: "The Duchess at Prayer," "The Angel at the Grave," "The Recovery,"...
15) In Morocco
19) The Children
In this comic novel by a Pulitzer Prize–winning author, a bachelor on a transatlantic cruise meets a group of runaway children who change his life forever.
Martin Boyne is a cautious man of forty-six. The bachelor has been nursing a relationship with a widow for five years, and now he is crossing the Atlantic to be with her. He laments that he never meets interesting people in his travels, but that is about to change . . .
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