Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton by Hermione Lee is a comprehensive biography published by Knopf on April 10, 2007. This first edition spans 880 pages and is presented in English. The book explores the life of Edith Wharton, one of America’s notable writers, challenging the conventional image of her as a mere bluestocking. Hermione Lee utilizes previously untapped sources to reveal a more complex and modern Wharton, who navigated the literary world with remarkable professionalism while engaging with a vibrant social circle in Europe.
Readers will find a detailed account of Wharton’s life, including her adventurous travels, her literary evolution, and her personal struggles. The biography delves into her relationships with contemporaries such as Henry James and highlights her contributions beyond literature, including her efforts during the Great War. Lee’s narrative intertwines Wharton’s personal experiences with her writing, offering insights into her character and the broader intellectual landscape of her time. This biography presents a nuanced portrait of a woman who defied societal expectations and left a lasting impact on American literature.
Official synopsis Publisher
The definitive biography of one of America’s greatest writers, from the author of the acclaimed masterpiece Virginia Woolf.
Delving into heretofore untapped sources, Hermione Lee does away with the image of the snobbish bluestocking and gives us a new Edith Wharton—tough, startlingly modern, as brilliant and complex as her fiction.
Born in 1862, Wharton escaped the suffocating fate of the well-born female, traveled adventurously in Europe and eventually settled in France. After tentative beginnings, she developed a forceful literary professionalism and thrived in a luminous society that included Bernard Berenson, Aldous Huxley and most famously Henry James, who here emerges more as peer than as master. Wharton’s life was fed by nonliterary enthusiasms as well: her fabled houses and gardens, her heroic relief efforts during the Great War, the culture of the Old World, which she never tired of absorbing. Yet intimacy eluded her: unhappily married and childless, her one brush with passion came and went in midlife, an affair vividly, intimately recounted here.
With profound empathy and insight, Lee brilliantly interweaves Wharton’s life with the evolution of her writing, the full scope of which shows her far to be more daring than her stereotype as lapidarian chronicler of the Gilded Age. In its revelation of both the woman and the writer, Edith Wharton is a landmark biography.
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