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Newland's inaction - spoiler alert
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By Grandpa Jud · 42 posts · 870 views
last updated Dec 30, 2019 02:52PM
Review *Most Definitely Contains Spoilers*
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By Karena · 59 posts · 284 views
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What Members Thought

Mar 23, 2012
Carol
rated it
liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
pulitzer-prize-winner,
wharton
Winner of the 1921 Pulitzer Prize,
The Age of Innocence
is Edith Wharton’s masterful portrait of desire and betrayal during the sumptuous Golden Age of Old New York, a time when society people “dreaded scandal more than disease.”
First I must comment that this is not one of my favorite classic. But I do admire Wharton's ambition, the fact that she volunteered to help others who desperately needed it. One example is her relief volunteer in France during Word War I. One thing that few people n ...more
First I must comment that this is not one of my favorite classic. But I do admire Wharton's ambition, the fact that she volunteered to help others who desperately needed it. One example is her relief volunteer in France during Word War I. One thing that few people n ...more

Dec 05, 2012
Alessia
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liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
classics,
1001-books,
cwatc-bookclub,
english-lit,
american,
2013,
classic-authors-challenge
Wonderfully written, beautiful description of scenery. one could almost see each chapter as a little scene from a play. But oh my, how pointless it all was. As a satire it was lacklustre and not witty at all and with a hideous protagonist. I wonder why Edith Wharton chose to tell the novel from his point of view. Was she empathetic towards him? Was she mocking his inability to act and his sense of superiority? truly, I couldn't say. I probably need to think it through some more. Three stars for
...more

I love love loved this book. Every character, every witty phrase, every heartbreak. It left me in the moral dilemma of who to champion, the mistress or the wife, and it kept me from hating the man who loved them both. So well-written and subtly critiquing the New York of its day, its themes are still relevant to the 21st century. I will definitely be adding a hardcover edition to my personal library.

Sep 20, 2011
Patricia Willers
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Dec 27, 2011
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Jan 06, 2012
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