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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best Wharton biographies
At 880 pages, with illustrations,this weighty tome is in my opinion the best biography of Edith Wharton. Hermione Lee who also gave us "Virginia Woolf" [another wonderful biography] is dedicated to research and detail, and manages to thoroughly flesh out her subjects. Given the complex life and character of Edith Wharton, the task of dissecting her life and...
Published on April 30, 2007 by Z Hayes

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24 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Neither well edited nor fact-checked
I plowed through the first fifty pages or so before putting this book aside in digust. Topics are introduced, dropped, revisited, then dropped again at random, adding to both the page count and the reader's confusion. Simple facts are wrong -- Lee states that The Breakers, the Vanderbilt home in Newport, cost $200 million to build, when in fact the estimates for the...
Published on May 16, 2007 by Harold S. Levine


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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best Wharton biographies, April 30, 2007
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
At 880 pages, with illustrations,this weighty tome is in my opinion the best biography of Edith Wharton. Hermione Lee who also gave us "Virginia Woolf" [another wonderful biography] is dedicated to research and detail, and manages to thoroughly flesh out her subjects. Given the complex life and character of Edith Wharton, the task of dissecting her life and accomplishments seems like a herculean task that Ms Lee does excellently. We learn of Ms Wharton's accomplishments not only as a great writer, having authored novels that have tackled the delicate issues of human frailty and desires [Custom of the Country, House of Mirth, and Age of Innocence, among others], but also her talents in designing, gardening & her philanthropical pursuits. Ms Wharton was also a prolific traveler, and this biography truly showcases her many talents besides writing. We learn of Ms Wharton's early marriage to a much older man, a union that was not successful and led to a divorce many years later. We also discover Ms Wharton's late blooming as an author [she was almost 40] and her affair with an American journalist and close friendships [mainly with the opposite sex]. The biography also gives us insight into Wharton's inspiration for her writing [drawn heavily from events in her own life], and all in all, it is a laudable effort at giving us tremendous insight into the life of a talented and complicated author.
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39 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wharton and Peace, May 25, 2007
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
I just finished Hermione Lee's biography, which took me roughly a month to finish (I usually don't spend more than a few days on a book.), and its girth occasionally hurt my back. (That's a joke...) I have not read other biographies Lee has written (though I do own "Virginia Woolf", and was impressed with Lee's insight of Woolf on the DVD of "The Hours"), so I can't compare, but I gather the Virginia Woolf biography is very good. I have read other biographies of Edith Wharton; R.W.B. Lewis', and Cynthia Griffin Woolf's excellent "A Feast of Words", and Lee's is an exhaustive reiteration of much that has come before, with some subtle additions and revisions of thought. I have a new vision of Wharton during her "Neurasthenic" period, which struck her early in marriage. She gardened, wrote and traveled extensively, whereas I had the impression she was bed-ridden and slightly invalid. The life force of Edith Wharton appears to have been astonishing and exhausting. Very few of us would pass her formidable "muster", and I understand completely why Henry James labeled her "The Angel of Devastation" (Disappointing discovery that James was virulently anti-suffrage).

The book is at times, dispassionately academic. It has moments, and at its best one has the sense that Lee is weaving, or knitting, a complete picture of who Edith Wharton might actually have been. Yes, there are some things we will never know, but I get the idea. Some chapters moved along briskly, other didn't (for me). The chapter called "Italian Backgrounds" is loaded with minute detail about those kinds of gardens and Wharton's interest in them (as you would guess from the title). I'm not a gardener, however, and found myself losing interest - there is A LOT of description of Italian Gardens. Illustrations would have helped (me). I did enjoy HL's analysis of EW's Italian novel "The Valley of Decision" (the book is completely worth it for the analysis of the Wharton's writings. I wish Penguin, or N.Y.R.B, or Vintage would publish an affordable and attractive edition of "The Valley of Decision") As another reviewer observed, the book does get bogged down with detail from time to time. While I certainly couldn't write such a book (I disagree with the assertion that it was not well researched, on the contrary, the research seems dizzying and at the very least thorough: nothing is perfect.), I'm impressed that Hermione Lee did.

Wharton comes across as delightfully bitchy with the upper classes. The Breakers is described as a "Thermopylae of Bad Taste". Mrs. Wharton, on a tour of a wealthy acquaintances' home, was informed that this was the woman's "Louis Quinze Room", to which Mrs. Wharton replied, looking about through her lorgnette, "Why, my dear?" (Her knowledge of architecture and historical interiors was encyclopedic, and would currently entitle her to a Masters Degree. She would have several, in fact... and a Doctorate or two.) In a letter she stated that an unnamed party "...decided to have books in their library." Her story "The Line of Least Resistance" borrowed too closely from an angered Emily Sloane's personal life, and Ogden Codman may have summed up Edith best saying, " Poor Pussy is of course very unpopular... she goes out of her way to be rude to people."

Most familiar with EW know how involved she was with the building and all details of each new Wharton residence, and there were many. One of the virtues of Lee's book is that we get a complete view of events; the timelines, the day-to-day occurrences in the process (es), also the transgressions (notably with Ogden Codman and the building of the Mount.) It is clear that Edith (or "Puss") wore the pants in the family. Teddy comes across as an affable, but slightly bumbling, "Club" man of the "Old Chap" sportsman type. He was not intellectually inclined, and hopelessly mismatched with the polar opposite Edith Jones.

The latter half of the book is dedicated to Wharton's life in France; her affair with Morton Fullerton, homes in the Rue De Varenne (and social place in The Faubourg.), and of course her valiant, tireless war work, all covered in great detail. Interesting that Proust may have been a translator of "The House of Mirth", and though she and Proust were many times over connected socially, they never met. The pairing is a no-brainer, and bearing in mind Wharton's conscious or unconscious predilection for homosexual companions (Henry James, Andre Gide to name a few - even her passionate mid-life love affair was with the prodigiously bi-sexual Fullerton), it's possible that Proust and Wharton would have been great friends, though Lee points out that Proust was primarily interested in Countesses. When read together "The House of Mirth", "The Custom of the Country" (read it if you haven't - it's one of EW's most satisfying, ruthless, and well-written novels.), and "The Age of Innocence" (more sublime with every reading), could be compared to Wharton's miniature version of Proust. Have your French dictionary ready though, as there is much quotation of letters written in French with minimal translation - another category (like architecture, and gardening) in which Lee assumes her reader has a working knowledge.

I had hoped there might be more information about Wharton's frosty mother Lucretia, and Edith's relationship with her. Lee points out that little written material relating to her parents has survived. However, Lee suggests that Wharton's own haughty nature may have been an inherited trait of Mama, and that "Lu" is front and center in many, many instances of Wharton's writing. Wharton was candid in her version of her mother. I wonder if it ever occured to her that she may have been more similar to Lucretia than different. (Perhaps Lily's mother in "The House of Mirth", who expresses distaste at people who "live like pigs" is a sketch of Lucretia Jones) It's been commonly thought that Lucretia had Edith's young poetry published in a volume titled "Verses" in Newport, but it was more likely her more intellectually sympathetic fathers's doing. Which makes more sense, as one pictures the exasperation Mother must have felt with the bafflingly intelligent Edith - forcing Mama to entertain her friends while the child is seized with the urge to "Make-Up" (write stories)

All in all, "Edith Wharton" is an exhaustively researched biography of considerable merit. There were sections that moved ahead with full steam, and some that sort of drag (for me) and need to be plowed through in order to finish, but I certainly don't resent the information. For the most part it has beautifully "woven" quality about it. It does seem that it would benefit with more editing; the amount of smaller (I hesitate to say lesser) detail is mind numbing. Her great friendship with Henry James is beautifully documented. Included is the account of the elaborate hoax she and James New York publisher orchestrated in order to give James a generous advance on a future book (meant to bolster his flagging self-esteem), which was really just a very generous monetary gift from Edith. The analysis of stories and novels is excellent, and well worth the price of admission. I read in an interview of Hermione Lee that she felt she would not be thought "smart enough" if she were actually able to meet Edith Wharton. Perhaps the length and breadth stems from that thought, that she is writing to prove herself worthy of her subject. I think Ms. Lee may rest easy with her next subject: she is a perfectly capable biographer.

Also recommended: Cynthia Griffin Wolff's "A Feast of Words", a tightly written compellingly analyzed study of Mrs. Wharton
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Unfulfilled Life, April 28, 2007
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
This massive, nearly 900 page biography of Edith Wharton will be considered the definitive account of her life. Ms. Lee performed extensive research to flesh out this writer of conventional social graces and of the inner emotional life (see "The Age of Innocence"). Of interested is the thwarted life of Edith Wharton, trapped in a loveless marriage and embarking upon a mid-life affair with a confused American.

A writer of short stories, poems and novels, she wrote of ghost stories, decorating, social satires of New York, and war correspondence from the Great War. Edith Wharton was a woman of many talents who will keep the reader entralled long after the biography ends.
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24 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Neither well edited nor fact-checked, May 16, 2007
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
I plowed through the first fifty pages or so before putting this book aside in digust. Topics are introduced, dropped, revisited, then dropped again at random, adding to both the page count and the reader's confusion. Simple facts are wrong -- Lee states that The Breakers, the Vanderbilt home in Newport, cost $200 million to build, when in fact the estimates for the cost are closer to $7 million. ( If Lee can make a whopper like that, I start to question every other statement of fact.) Her aunt Elizabeth's Hudson River home is Wyndeclife, not Wyndeliffe. And as a long-time New Yorker familiar with all the geography of Manhattan, I also started to wonder if Lee ever actually walked the sites she talks about. West 14th Street isn't now, nor was it ever, considered Gramercy Park!
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16 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars interesting but drowning in minutiae, May 13, 2007
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
I have read a small smattering of Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth, The Age of Innocence and Ethan Frome. I HAVE read Hermione Lee's biographies of Willa Cather and Virginia Woolf. Her previous biographies were so enlightening that I immediately read all of Cather's works (some I reread) and Woolf's works (I had only read two of her works). This biography however, does not make me want to run out and read more Wharton because I got so drowned in her critiques of her writing that I found all these details overwhelming. Lee also includes details of daily living that become burdensome at times for the reader. Wharton was a prolific writer and her own life certainly would have made an interesting novel. When Lee sticks to the details of Wharton's life without delving into every written Wharton word and how each work is autobiographical, or compares to some event of her life, or doesn't compare, the reader will find Lee writes so well that you can't wait to find out what happens next. Unless I have gone brain dead, I don't recall this much discussion from Lee in her previous works on Woolf and Cather. The parallels she drew in those previous works to the authors' lives is what prompted me to read everything they wrote! I felt I understood Cather and Woolf after reading Lee's biographies, but I still don't understand Wharton. Maybe I understand her better than I did, but she still remains a mystery to me overall.

Lee does speculate on some matters, and maybe my problem is more with the subject of Wharton than what Lee wrote. Edith Wharton buried and hid so much of her life that it may never be known what made her tick.

I just wish I didn't have to spend so much time reading this book to find that out, as it's very lengthy, and "drowning" in details.
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19 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another majestic biography from Professor Lee, April 13, 2007
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This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
Edith Wharton truly hasn't been given the respect and noteworthiness that is so deserved, but hopefully some of that will change with Professor Hermione Lee's new biography. As wonderfully detailed as her previous biography for Virginia Woolf, it's inspired me to set my own Wharton works in order for a re-reading just as soon as I complete this book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent biography brings Wharton to life, August 7, 2009
By 
Alissa R. Wright (Los Angeles, CA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Audio CD)
I loved this audiobook, although at 7 disks, the abridged version I heard was clearly very, very abridged. Lee's research and writing make Edith Wharton seem so real and so human and puts her books into perspective in terms of what was going on in her life at the time she wrote them.

The only criticism I have for this audiobook is that there are a whole lot of quotes from her letters, etc. that are in French, and only about 1/3 of them are followed by English translations. It's really frustrating as a non-French speaker to be denied these parts of what is an extraordinarily fascinating story. There is even a point where, in the midst of some particularly juicy correspondence, it says something to the effect of "And perhaps most revealing, Wharton wrote (long French sentence)." I was DYING to know what she said!!!

Other than that, though, this is an amazing, inspiring book that will make you want to read or re-read everything Edith Wharton wrote.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding, June 22, 2009
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Vintage) (Paperback)
I was first introduced to Hermione Lee when I stumbled upon and read her outstanding biography of Virginia Woolf. With so much already written by and about Woolf, I could not imagine an author coming up with enough fresh material, or old material written freshly, to justify reading such a huge book. But I did, and I was very, very impressed.

So, when I entered my "Edith Wharton phase" and began looking for a biography of Wharton before reading her works, I was more than pleasantly surprised to find that Hermione Lee had written a similarly huge biography of Edith Wharton.

Unlike Woolf, Wharton left almost nothing behind for her biographers, except her works: she left none of the letters others sent her (there may be rare exceptions) and there are very few letters that she wrote others that have survived. But despite this Lee has written another outstanding biography.

This is why I like it:

1) the numerous references throughout the book to other classic literary works, from Goethe to Bronte;

2) the extensive research on Henry James;

3) reading about Edith Wharton's appreciation (or lack thereof) of the modernist movement, specifically that of Virginia Woolf, the Bloomsbury Group, and James Joyce;

4) Wharton's thoughts on love, marriage, and divorce;

5) the candid, but balanced look at Wharton's affairs;

6) the meshing of Wharton's life with her novels; and,

7) the way she ends the book, and the vignette of Lee's personal visit to Wharton's grave in Paris.

I have the hard cover; this, review, I believe will be on the softcover.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Edith Wharton: The great American novelist's life is presented in exquisite detail by biographer Hermione Lee, July 5, 2007
This review is from: Edith Wharton (Hardcover)
Edith Newbold "Pussy" Jones was born into a wealthy and socially prominent New York family in 1862. Her father was cold and distant. He was involved in real estate transactions. Her mother Lucretia was not a good mentor for her precocious bookworm daughter. Edith had two older brothers. Her childhood was lonesome punctuated by long trips to the cities of Europe (her father died in Cannes). Edith received no formal schooling but fed her retentive mind by study in her father's library. Wharton was a passionate reader and author from a very early age. She received no encouragement from her parents being married off to the much older Edward "Teddy" Wharton in 1885. Teddy was bipolar loving horses, drinkiing and playing cards with his buddies. Their marriage was a disaster ending in divorce after 25 years of life together. The couple were childless.
Edith had a passionate affair at 45 with Morton Fullerton a newspaperman in Paris who had countless affairs. The couple never married but remained friendly until Edith's death in 1937.
Edith was a Francophile who did a good deal of relief work during the first world war winning several honors from the French government. In politics she was conservative. Wharton was antisemitic, snobbish and looked down upon persons of color. She was a control freak who demanded excellence in her writing and life. Edith traveled widely for over 50 years staying in the best hotels; eating in great restaurants and exploring art museums, libraries and concerts. What a life of privilege!!!
Wharton never married following the divorce from Teddy. Mrs. Wharton did have several lifelong male friends most notably Walter Barry the President of the Paris version of the US Chamber of Commerce. She was also friendly with novelist Aldous Huxley, art historian Bernard Bernson and several lady friends. The great novelist Henry James was her most famous literary pal. She is often compared to James in her writing style. Hermione Lee says as far as we know all of these friendships were platonic. Wharton's friendships were with the wealthy and artistic elite. The novelist was a consummate snob who was, nevertheless, viewed as being kind and loyal by her friends.
Edith Wharton wrote many novels among the most famous being "The Custom of the Country"; "Ethan Frome"; "The Age of Innocence"; "Glimpses of the Moon" and "Summer". Wharton was a prolific short story author selling her tales to magazines. Her focus was on the wealthy. She dealt with marriage. incest, New York society and the the sexual mores of the well to do. She was disdained by the younger authors of the 1920s for being old fashioned. She wrote in an elegant style noted for its daring subject matter.
Hermione Lee is the author of Virginia Woolf as well as this biography on Wharton. The book is 800 pages long dealing in incredible detail with such topics as:
a. Wharton's love life and divorce from Teddy.
b. Wharton's many gardens and her books on gardening.
c. Close descriptions of all the fabulous homes Edith owned which are shown in several pictures included in the book.
d A description of the most important travels Wharton made in her life.
e. Short but well informed synopses and critical comments on her novels and short stories. We also get a glimpse of her poetry.
f. Discussions of the lives of her closest friends.
g. A loving review of Edith Wharton's World War I volunteer service to France.
After finishing this book I admire Wharton for her dedication to the craft of novel authorship. Wharton was a woman of high standards and loyalty to her friends. She could be frosty but was kind. Her love for animals, friends in need and loving care for aging servants is commendable. Her snobbish disdain for those of different races or religions is not appreciated (She converted to Roman Catholicism in her last few years.). Wharton was a born storyteller who can still hold the interest of the modern reader.
Hermione Lee is an excellent biographer who knows literature. Her biography of Edith Wharton is a wonderful book for those willing to devote the hours needed to read the lengthy text.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent., September 20, 2011
By 
Laura Reading (Freehold, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Edith Wharton (Vintage) (Paperback)
I don't know why, but I expected an older book. Probably because of the subject matter. But it was actually in "new" condition. Don't think anyone read it before me and I only got through about 100 pages. A 700 page plus book. No problem with the condition or delivery.
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Edith Wharton (Vintage)
Edith Wharton (Vintage) by Hermione Lee (Paperback - April 8, 2008)
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