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The House of Mirth

3.8(10)
Language
English
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About the book

The House of Mirth (1905) is Edith Wharton's incisive tragedy of manners, tracing Lily Bart's precarious passage through the glittering yet punitive world of New York's Gilded Age elite. With controlled irony, psychological subtlety, and a prose style at once elegant and unsparing, Wharton exposes a society in which beauty, marriage, money, and reputation function as instruments of power. The novel stands in the tradition of realist social criticism, yet its moral ambiguity and inward focus give it a distinctly modern depth. Wharton wrote from intimate knowledge of the aristocratic circles she anatomized. Born into old New York privilege, she understood both the rituals of fashionable life and the spiritual constriction beneath its polished surfaces. Her own resistance to conventional expectations, her unhappy marriage, and her formidable intellectual independence sharpened her insight into the limited choices available to women like Lily Bart, whose intelligence cannot save her from social and economic dependency. Readers interested in American realism, feminist literary history, or the moral costs of social ambition will find The House of Mirth indispensable. It is a beautifully crafted and devastating novel, recommended for those who value fiction that combines narrative elegance with profound ethical force.

Editions (46)

ISBN9788028331542
PublisherSharp Ink
Publication Date11/18/23
Pages200

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