Edith Wharton
1) Ethan Frome
3) The reef
5) Summer
8) Sanctuary
Originally published in 1903, "Sanctuary" is a unique novel by American author Edith Wharton. Written while she was writing "The House of Mirth," "Sanctuary" is a little hidden gem of Wharton's, with impeccable prose and moments when the suspense becomes almost unbearable.
"Sanctuary" tells the story of...
11) Bunner sisters
The younger sister, Ann Eliza, has encountered a sickly, but educated clockmaker who sells her a clock. At first, knowledge of his personality and previous lifestyle are unknown to the sisters, but they slowly befriend the lonely man and his visits to the home are frequent...
An American in Paris at the turn of the nineteenth century, John Durham pays court to an old flame, Fanny Frisbee, now married to the dissolute Marquis de Malrive. Devoutly Catholic, Fanny's husband is unlikely to grant her a divorce or relinquish custody of their young son, who is heir to the family title. When the Malrive family, urged by Fanny's enigmatic sister-in-law, Madame de Treymes, agrees to a divorce, John must decide whether or not
...14) In Morocco
"Crucial Instances" is Edith Wharton's classic 1901 short story collection, the second collection of short fiction of her career.
The collection consists of six entertaining works of short fiction, and one dialogue: "The Duchess at Prayer," "The Angel at the Grave," "The Recovery,"...
First published in 1899, "The Greater Inclination" was the earliest collection of short fiction by American author Edith Wharton, her first work of literature.
"The Greater Inclination" consists of 8 works, 7 short fiction and a play in two acts. It is a somewhat diverse collection, with several stories...
19) The children
In this comic novel by a Pulitzer Prize–winning author, a bachelor on a transatlantic cruise meets a group of runaway children who change his life forever.
Martin Boyne is a cautious man of forty-six. The bachelor has been nursing a relationship with a widow for five years, and now he is crossing the Atlantic to be with her. He laments that he never meets interesting people in his travels, but that is about to change . . .
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