Ethan Frome & Summer
Edith Wharton, Elizabeth Strout
Paperback
(Modern Library, May 8, 2001)
A pair of masterly short novels, featuring an introduction by Elizabeth Strout, the Pulitzer Prizeâwinning author of Anything Is Possible and My Name Is Lucy Barton Thought Edith Wharton is best known for her cutting contemplation of fashionable New York, Ethan Frome and Summer are set in small New England towns, far from Manhattanâs beau monde. Together in one volume, these thematically linked short novels display Whartonâs characteristic criticism of societyâs hypocrisy, and her daring exploration of the destructive consequences of sexual appetite. From the wintry setting of Ethan Frome, where a man hounded by community standards is destroyed by the very thing that might bring him happiness, to the florid town of Summer, where a young womanâs first romance projects her into a dizzying rite of passage, Wharton captures beautifully the urges and failures of human nature. Praise for Edith Wharton and Ethan Frome âEthan Frome [is considered] Mrs. Whartonâs masterpiece . . . The secret of its greatness is the stark human drama of it; the social crudity and human delicacy intermingled; the defiant, over-riding passion, and the long-drawn-out logic of the paid penalty. It has no contexts, no mitigations; it is plain, raw, first-hand human stuff.ââThe New York Times âEthan Frome [has] become part of the American mythology. . . . Whartonâs astonishing authority here is to render such pain with purity and economy . . . Truly it is a northern romance, akin even to Wuthering Heights.ââHarold Bloom âTraditionally, Henry James has always been placed slightly higher up the slope of Parnassus than Edith Wharton. But now that the prejudice against the female writer is on the wane, they look to be exactly what they are: giants, equals, the tutelary and benign gods of our American literature.ââGore Vidal