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The House of Mirth
By (Author) Edith Wharton
Alma Books Ltd
Alma Classics
5th July 2022
24th May 2022
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
Narrative theme: Sense of place
Romance
Narrative theme: Social issues
813.52
Paperback
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
An impoverished member of the privileged Old New York society, Lily Bart is beautiful and socially agreeable, yet she has almost reached the age of thirty a dangerous threshold for a young woman and is still unmarried. Now she is desperate to secure a wealthy husband to confirm her status in society, but her penchant for gambling at cards, her reduced circumstances, her determination to marry for love and the constant gossip she attracts from malevolent tongues through her heedless behaviour and her constant social faux pas make her prospects look bleak. As suitor after suitor appears and fades away, and she is drawn further and further down into a spiral of debt and unhappiness, she realizes that she is just one step away from losing everything she has. Published in 1905 to immediate critical and commercial success, The House of Mirth is perhaps Edith Whartons most popular work a brilliant evocation of the economic and social changes wrought by the Gilded Age which transcends the novel of manners, as well as a universal satire on the constraints and follies of upper-crust conventions.
Edith Wharton (18621937) was an American author best known for the novel The Age of Innocence, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1921, making her the first female winner of the award.