#AboutABook
#Pub100YearsAgo
@Eggs
@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
Loved reading this with the #WhartonBuddyRead folks. 🩶🖤🩶
#AboutABook
#Pub100YearsAgo
@Eggs
@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
Loved reading this with the #WhartonBuddyRead folks. 🩶🖤🩶
Themes are the stifling culture of NY‘s old elite inter-marrying families, where men control the money, and woman are dependent. Wharton gives us humans within this culture. Overall, the stories benefit from that Wharton prose that makes everything easy and comfortable and interesting. Her writing catches us readers early. You're involved, characters crystallize before your eyes quickly, sometimes many all at once, each distinct.
#whartonbuddyread
New Years Day - our last story
#whartonbuddyread
“She was bad …always.”
Like with Hayley, we open with a character assassination, although this time a societal judgment, exposing issues of that society. But this story has a trick to it, a mystery and an unexpected explanation. This wraps up our latest Wharton. What were your thoughts on Lizzie Hazeldean and her story?
This collection of four novellas showcases Wharton's sublime prose & her psychological insight. All four novellas are special, but the standouts for me were The Old Maid & New Year's Day (the latter, as pointed out by @dabbe that reminds one of The Age of Innocence, as well as The House of Mirth, but somehow with an unexpected twist from Wharton in the sense of a hopeful ending!). It was so easy to fall into the rhythms of Wharton's narratives.
Comprising four novellas by Wharton, ONY depicts the codes and conduct of New York in inscrutable fashion as only Wharton can do. The one closest to my heart was NEW YEAR'S DAY, with a main character similar to Ellen Olenska in THE AGE OF INNOCENCE, who faces ostracism from NY society for her scandalous suspected conduct of an illicit affair. Exquisite prose and insightful character studies. Thanks #whartonbuddyread for yet another Wharton wonder.
The Spark - 3rd story in Old New York
#whartonbuddyread
A character study of Hayley Delane. But we‘re not in the 1860‘s. Instead we‘re roughly contemporary (1920‘s), looking back at the 1890‘s, and imagining the impact of the 1860‘s American Civil War on HD. Wharton is maybe thinking of WWI, and also of Walt Whitman.
What did you think of Hayley, and his wife Leila and that opening line? Or of our narrator? Or of the impacts of war and poets?
If you have a few minutes to spare, I really enjoyed this documentary video about Wharton. Insightful!
“A Lady Doesn‘t Write”
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Fucxnpp-Agg
#whartonbuddyread
The Old Maid
#whartonbuddyread
There are a lot of aspects of this story that don‘t sit well with contemporary senses - the racism and perception more intellectual blood lines for one, and the nature of this guilt. That‘s one conversation.
But looking past this is the complicated character of Delia Lovell Ralston. A strange well-meaning villain? Stilted in affluence, and socially agile? Any thoughts on her and other characters, some in TAoI.
#whartonbuddyread the lovely front endpapers of the Old Maid , 2nd novella in the Old New York volume.
#whartonbuddyread I‘m going in! The 2nd novella of 4, this is the last one I have in hardcover , ebook for the last 2!😁
🍏 🍁gazing,🍎picking, baking 🥧, enjoying the changing weather, preparing for and celebrating 🎃👻💀🧙🏽♀️🧟♀️
🍎 😴😴😴😴
🍏the tagged book
#wondrouswednesday thanks for the tag @Eggs @The_Penniless_Author
Calling on all my fellow lovers of autumn to play!
Oh I think this may be my new favourite by Wharton. What a cantankerous, belligerent Mr Raycie is. His rants are hilarious ?
"...buying these things that look more like cut outs o' Foxe's book of Martyrs than Originals of the Old Masters for a Gentleman's Gallery!!"
Poor little Louisa.
Wharton‘s window into the culture of 1840‘s New York high society. Scathing and tolerant? Was della Francesca really so unknown? What do you think (or know)?
I found I slipped back into this Wharton world effortlessly. She just has a way.
#whartonbuddyread finished False Dawn, the first of 4 novellas contained in Old New York. Looking forward to the discussion! The back endpapers of my old copy !
#whartonbuddyread Front endpapers False Dawn ,found a link about the artist. https://graphicarts.princeton.edu/2020/12/16/edward-colie-caswell/
#whartonbuddyread I have 2 of the 4 novellas in their original format. I will probably ebook the 2 I don‘t have . Here I go!
Ok, I‘ve started. And I already feel very at home with like ten different characters. #whartonbuddyread
I‘m up for some social snark from one of my favorite writers this morning! 😏
Just a reminder - #whartonbuddyread in September - which starts Friday !
#rereadtheclassics #whartonbuddyread
Found just what I needed at our local bookstore for September's Wharton read and October's classics read. Plus picked up Ethan Frome for my mother-in-law, who was just evacuated due to a wildfire near her home. 😟🔥
repost for @Graywacke:
How does a September of Wharton sound?
#whartonbuddyread
This is collection of four novellas that all tie into The Age Innocence, first published together in 1924. Each is about 100 pages. I think one per week will work nicely.
original post:
https://www.litsy.com/web/post/2612952
How does a September of Wharton sound?
#whartonbuddyread
This is collection of four novellas that all tie into The Age Innocence, first published together in 1924. Each is about 100 pages. I think one per week will work nicely.
My schedule has been super busy lately. Yesterday I went to the njala conference and today I'm meeting a friend in NYC who is visiting from Cali. I seem to be entering a bit of a reading slump which is killing me. Might have to do a reread soon so I can get back on track. #springreads #nyc #travel
Doing some research for my book today, I made these maps I'm proud of with all the ethnic neighborhoods of 1870. As your fun fact of the day, expensive SoHo was once the hub of the sex district! Mercer St had 21 brothels on it and pamphlets with addresses and reviews were discreetly given to visitors and rich men, like yelp! #oldny #gildedagenyc
Edith Wharton, telling it like it is.
The first novella in this book is False Dawn, which takes place in 1840's New York and is about a domineering father who tries to control his son. Here, she describes the "benefits" of The Grand Tour that the son is about to embark on. As usual, Wharton leaves no doubt as to her feelings about male dominance and the culture of the time.
Trying to read books that have been on my TBR for a long time. It's been awhile since I've read Edith Wharton, and I've had this book since January of 2006! #readingmyshelves
I ❤️ Edith Wharton and would recommend her in a #newyorkminute. Several of her works were set in the Gilded Age New York City. Here's a couple of them. It's been years since I last read her, though!