
The House of Mirth
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Narrated by:
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Eleanor Bron
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By:
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Edith Wharton
About this listen
Exclusively from Audible
Beautiful, sophisticated and endlessly ambitious Lily Bart endeavours to climb the social ladder of New York's elite by securing a good match and living beyond her means.
Now nearing 30 years of age and having rejected several proposals, forever in the hope of finding someone better, her future prospects are threatened.
A damning commentary of 20th-century social order, Edith Wharton's tale established her as one of the greatest British novelists of the 1900s. Taking us on a journey through lavish drawing rooms in grand country houses to cold and menacing boarding houses, Wharton addresses the consequences awaiting those who openly dared to challenge the status quo.
First published in serial form, The House of Mirth contributed significantly to Edith Wharton's already substantial riches. Accustomed to living a life of privilege, Wharton was able to foster her creative talents from a young age.
Working as a published author from the age of 18, Wharton's story is as intriguing and daring as her heroine's. Wedding and then divorcing Edward Wharton, her experience of marriage and consequent heartbreak is usually chronicled in her works.
Never the victim however, Wharton went on to receive multiple awards for her writing, as well as the bravery that she demonstrated during the First World War when she organised hostels for refugees, fund-raised for those in need and reported from battlefield frontlines.
Usually seen in the company of other great authors including Jack London, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Jean Cocteau, Wharton became a literary master whose skill and wit is perfectly captured in this enthralling audiobook.
Narrator Biography
Celebrated author and stage, film and television actress, Eleanor Bron, lends her iconic voice to the narration of The House of Mirth.
Best known for her roles in films such as A Little Princess, Bedazzled, Women in Love, Black Beauty and Alfie, Eleanor's career is as varied as it has been successful.
Also not a stranger to the theatre, Bron thrived in classical and modern productions of plays including The Prime of Miss Jean Brody, The Merchant of Venice, Private Lives, All About My Mother and Hedda Gabler.
A celebrated writer, Eleanor has published various titles, including Life and Other Punctures, Double Take and The Pillow Book of Eleanor Bron.
Further audiobook contributions include A Little Princess by Frances Burnett, The Aeneid by Virgil, The Parasites by Daphne du Maurier and Daniel Deronda by George Eliot.
Public Domain (P)2014 Audible, Inc.A masterpiece
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Lovely reading of Edith Wharton's tale of a society girl's downfall
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Apart from that it was absolutely superb- as one expects from this publisher.
Beautifully done.
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Mirth
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Beautifully written
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Beautiful but sad
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“ My doctor forbids me to partake of the awful morning airs” ( sic). I love words so much and so did she. ,
Brilliant
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Absolute Perfection
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Through a combination of bad luck, her own high minded distaste for dishonest compromise and her ambivalent attachment to a man who might be worthy of her, but unable to supply the material luxury she feels should be her due.
Then her fall begins because, when the veneer is stripped back, the carefree world she coverts is really just a flourish of money and power. Those that have neither must become playthings and adornments. And, of course, victims.
A fine companion piece to the author’s better known The Age of Innocence, this is almost a great novel. It is diminished by the bathos of its final chapters as melodrama threatens. All the same there is much of the highest merit to compensate for any failings.
To fall in the gilded age
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Fascinating! Eleanor Bron - superb.
Fascinating view of women’s lives in 1900
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