4.0(1)

Old New York

Spanning four decades in the mid-nineteenth century, the interconnected novellas of Old New York lay out in vivid detail the complex and inscrutable codes, customs, and taboos of New York society in one of Wharton's sharpest dissections of American aristocracy.

False Dawn (1840s): Lewis Raycie, the idealistic son of a wealthy New York family, is sent to Europe to acquire art that will elevate the family's cultural standing. But when he returns, his family is horrified because he has purchased works by then‑unknown painters – which will one day be priceless—rather than the "approved" Old Masters his father expects.

The Old Maid (1850s): A heartbreaking story about the devastating cost of maintaining social respectability, The Old Maid is the best known of the stories in this collection. Charlotte Lovell, a quiet, dutiful woman, has an illegitimate daughter, Tina, fathered by a man who died before they could marry. To protect Tina's future, Charlotte allows her glamorous (married) cousin Delia to raise the child as her own.

As Tina grows up, Charlotte becomes the "old maid" who hovers on the margins of the household, loving her daughter but unable to claim her.

The Spark (1860s): Hayley Delane was a schoolboy when the Civil War started. He ran off to join the war, was wounded at Bull Run, and spent a long time recovering in a hospital camp in Washington. There he met a mysterious stranger—a poet—whom Hayley has never forgotten.

New Year's Day (1870s): A scandal erupts when Lizzie Hazeldean is seen leaving a hotel with a man who is not her husband. Society assumes the worst and ostracises her, but the relationship is not at all what it seems in this story that exposes how easily gossip becomes "truth" in a society eager to condemn women.

Born into an old, wealthy, New York family, Edith Wharton (1862–1937) was an American novelist, short‑story writer, and cultural critic best known for her sharp, elegant portrayals of New York's Gilded Age elite. She spent much of her adult life in Europe and eventually settled in France, where she supported refugees during World War I and earned several French honours for her humanitarian work.

Wharton published more than forty books, including The House of Mirth, Ethan Frome andThe Age of Innocence (for which she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction). Her work explores themes of social constraint, desire, class, and the quiet tragedies of lives shaped by rigid expectations. She continued writing until her death in 1937, leaving behind a body of work that remains a cornerstone of American literature

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