EBOOK

Edith Wharton in France

Claudine Lesage
(0)
Pages
320
Year
2018
Language
English

About

Using previously unexamined and untranslated French sources, Claudine Lesage has illuminated the intertwined characters and important relationships of Wharton's French life. The bulk of the new material comes from the daybooks of Paul and Minnie Bourget; Wharton's letters (in French) to Léon Bélugou; and the author's personal research in Hyères. Highlights include letters used in Wharton's divorce proceedings and a mysterious autobiographical essay written by Wharton's lover Morton Fullerton. Most significantly, Wharton's friendship with Bélugou, absent from most Wharton biographies, is, for the first time, fully recounted through their extensive intimate correspondence. The year 1907 was a milestone in Edith Wharton's life and work. Unlike Joseph Conrad, who had, virtually overnight, forsaken his native land for an adopted one, Mrs. Wharton's transition required several years of shuttling back and forth across the Atlantic. At first, all of Europe beckoned to her, but, from 1907 on, Wharton would claim Paris and, after the war, the French countryside as her home. All the while, her work, long regarded as being exclusively American, followed a similar trajectory.

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Reviews

"In this smooth English translation, Claudine Lesage's Edith Wharton in France provides essential reading for lovers of Wharton's novels. Drawing on new letters for its intimate rendering of Wharton's circle, Lesage has constructed a kind of epistolary biography that reveals an extraordinary woman seeking and finding independence in an elite social world both familiar and strange."
Megan Marshall, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Margaret Fuller: A New American Life
"This view of Edith Wharton, from a new, French, perspective, not only fleshed out, but in some instances completely upended, what I already knew of the author from my research. There are sparkling new insights here."
Connie Woolridge, author of The Brave Escape of Edith Wharton
"Claudine Lesage's inspired sleuthing has produced thrilling new material no Wharton scholar can afford to miss. Edith Wharton in France will also intrigue a wider readership with its crucial additions to known facts about Wharton's overseas friendships and its provocative argument that gardening was as important as writing to the great novelist during her last years."
Diane Jacobs, New York Times notable book author of Dear Abigail: The Intimate Lives and R

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