The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
Seemingly only the story of a 'forbidden' love in 1870s New York, the book is rich with social observations and criticism. We get to witness the attitudes, moral codes and traditions of the upper classes through the eyes of Newland Archer, who is a young, rich lawyer. Archer questions the expectations and choices of his social tribe, especially after falling in love with Countess Ellen Olenska, who shockingly leaves her husband upon his unfaithfulness.
Wharton's prose is smooth and cleverly funny at times; however, I found the second half of the novel a little lacking. Even though I liked the ending of the story very much, it did not seem to hold its initial promises.
8/10 KitKats!
Never met an Edith Wharton I didn't like.
I'm not real comfortable saying that, in the case of "Mirth" and "Innocence", one is superior to the other. I love them both. While they both deal with the same sort of American aristocracy, I believe that "Mirth" is written to be more engaging because she wanted her readers to have a good cry over the heroine. In "Innocence," one the other hand, I think she very deliberately wants the book to cool to a certain extent. In doing so, she is dramatizing the way in which the lawyer, then old, has more or less come to terms with the fact that his "doing the right thing" killed his passion for life. Passion in life had been sacrificed for duty.
"Ethan Frome" is another kicker, and what a marvelous introduction to her works.
The first time I got to Paris, I stumbled upon her grave. Upon doing so, I ran out and got her some flowers.