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The Age of Innocence
About this book
A masterful portrait of love, duty, and societal expectation, The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton is a timeless exploration of passion constrained by convention. Set in the glittering yet rigid world of 1870s New York high society, this Pulitzer Prizeâwinning novel captures the tension between personal desire and the unyielding rules of tradition.
At the center of the story is Newland Archer, a cultivated and thoughtful young lawyer poised to marry the beautiful and proper May Welland. Their engagement appears to embody the ideals of their elite social circleârespectability, stability, and unquestioned adherence to custom. Yet Archer's carefully ordered life is disrupted by the arrival of May's cousin, the enigmatic Countess Ellen Olenska.
Recently separated from a troubled European marriage, Ellen returns to New York seeking independence and acceptance. Her unconventional manner and quiet defiance of societal norms both fascinate and unsettle the community. For Archer, she represents a world of emotional honesty and intellectual freedom that stands in stark contrast to the suffocating expectations of his environment.
As Archer becomes increasingly drawn to Ellen, he must confront the rigid codes that govern his world. Wharton delicately exposes the intricate social rituals, unspoken rules, and moral hypocrisies that define the era. Beneath the elegance of lavish dinners and opera boxes lies a culture deeply resistant to change, where reputation is paramount and individuality is often sacrificed to preserve appearances.
Through subtle irony and psychological insight, Wharton examines themes of conformity, repression, marriage, gender roles, and the cost of choosing safety over authenticity. Her nuanced portrayal of longing and restraint reveals how even the most privileged lives can be shapedâand limitedâby tradition.
Elegant, poignant, and incisive, The Age of Innocence remains one of the finest depictions of American upper-class society ever written. It is a story of quiet heartbreak and missed opportunity, reminding readers that true courage sometimes lies not in grand rebellion, but in the private recognition of what might have been.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- BOOK I
- BOOK II