Ethan Frome edition by Edith Wharton Sheba Blake Literature Fiction eBooks
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Ethan Frome is a novella by the Pulitzer Prize-winning American author Edith Wharton. It is set in the fictitious town of Starkfield, Massachusetts. The novel was adapted into a film, Ethan Frome, in 1993. The novel is framed by the literary device of an extended flashback. The prologue opens with an unnamed male narrator spending a winter in Starkfield, a fictional town in New England, while in the area on business. He spots a limping, quiet man around the village, who is somehow compelling in his demeanor and carriage. Curious, the narrator sets out to learn about him. He learns that Frome's limp arose from having been injured in a "smash-up" twenty-four years before, but further details are not forthcoming. Chance circumstances arise that allow the narrator to hire Frome as his driver for a week. A severe snowstorm during one of their journeys forces Frome to allow the narrator to shelter at his home one night. Just as the two are entering Frome's house, the prologue ends. We then embark on the "first" chapter (Chapter I), which takes place twenty-four years prior. The narration switches from the first-person narrator of the prologue to a limited third-person narrator. In Chapter I, Ethan is waiting outside a church dance to walk home Mattie, his wife's cousin, who has for a year lived with Ethan and his sickly wife, Zeena (Zenobia), in order to help out around the house and farm. It is quickly clear that Ethan has feelings for Mattie. It also becomes clear that Zeena has observed enough to understand that he has these feelings and resents them.
Ethan Frome edition by Edith Wharton Sheba Blake Literature Fiction eBooks
This novel was required reading in my high school back in the 1960's. I'm glad, because it was, and still is, one of my very favorite books of all time and I am a well read person (Note: my license plate reads B1G READ). Back in high school, I wanted to name my son, if I had one, Ethan. (I had three, but, unfortunately, they were all named names starting with "M". I regret that!)"Ethan Frome" is a great advisory tale of what might happen when you do not listen to your heart and follow it.
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Ethan Frome edition by Edith Wharton Sheba Blake Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews
I hadn't read Edith Wharton for some time, so I was happy to find this offering. Just made my purchase & I note that there is a CLEAR INDEX in the front; it is very easy to navigate and looks just like the side illustration (the one next to the cover pic). For 99 cents, this is a true bargain; many stories here! I'm glad to have Ms. Wharton on my ; it feels just like meeting an old friend again!
I did not like this book in high school. I can now safely say I don't like it as an adult either. Ethan Frome is a cautionary tale - there are too many warnings here to count depending on your perspective. But it's a story told at you, not one you live alongside the characters. I didn't find myself siding with anyone, because they were not likable people. Everyone is miserable. It is not enjoyable at all, this story about struggle, love, loss, and survival.
This review reflects the accuracy of the listing and not the story itself. The listing picture shows a beautifully bound, blue linen text with gold embossed title and small emblem on the cover. What I received however was nothing I would want to display in a home collection. It was an ENORMOUS old library book, in poor condition, with extremely large print unsuitable for carrying in one's purse or briefcase to read anywhere other than home. It was closer to the size of a briefcase itself, in fact. Be aware that you very well may not get the collectors item you think you are paying for. That said, if you have rather poor eyesight and are in need of extremely large type, this would be a very suitable book.
This is the 2nd time I licensed / read Ethan Frome, it was required reading for me in HSPA. And I did not understand the purpose. I think I understand better now. Or stalwart on this reading I'm getting a certain interpretation.
I think the blue-blooded , hypochondriac dominatrix Zeena has meuncher's syndrome. She is put our and threatened by her pauper cousin Mattie, and this hatred is in conjunction with being married to Ethan, both keeping her from her preferred elitist lifestyle. Unsure if Zeena knew, or suspected Ethan and Mattie's adultery. If she did not , she achieved the same goal of punishing both of them by sending Mattie away.
Yet, though its a tragedy that both Ethan and Mattie lived, it is also a fitting revenge best served cold on Zeena. It's also tragic how sweet lovable and admirable Mattie, switched personalities with Zeena.
Perhaps like many readers, my first introduction to Edith Wharton was through this work in a school setting. At the time, I was instantly struck by how good it was, especially considering its diminutive size. In fact, I decided to try another helping, The House of Mirth, which I enjoyed as well, although without the same intensity. For various reasons, years after my first encounter with Wharton, I decided to give Ethan Frome a second read. I am not sorry in the slightest for having done so, for this work is marvelous.
Ethan Frome is considered by many critics to be Wharton's finest work, although the rural setting and length is atypical of her output. She wrote the work in a determined effort to take a setting she felt was overly sentimentalized by her fellow female authors and strip the location of cozy `samplerism'. In this she has succeeded, for the landscape Wharton paints is uncomfortably stark. In the town of Starkfield, a young farmer, Ethan, shackled to a neurotic parasite of a wife, Zenobia, must choose between remaining faithful to his wife or succumbing to the agreeable attentions of the new servant, a distant relative of his wife's. As a conservative and religious man, I am usually unsympathetic to literary arguments against middle-class marital propriety, but Wharton has created such a monstrous witch in the character of Zenobia, and made the charming Mattie so thoroughly sweet, if not particularly skilled, that one can hardly blame Ethan for wavering, although acknowledging that his contemplation of abandoning Zeena and escaping West with Mattie is self-centered. The central plot is cushioned by a frame story set many years after a terrible accident Ethan suffers near the end of the work, in which an educated engineer, trapped by rough weather, stays with an aged, embittered Ethan at his decrepit farmstead. The exact details of this accident and its horrific aftermath are only revealed in the latter bookend of the frame story that closes this riveting tale of jealousy, illness, inertia, and constraint. The portraiture of the landscape and the psychology of three of its inhabitants is exquisitely rendered; Wharton knows her stuff.
Wordsworth Classics never fails to produce editions of the highest possible quality, and at vastly affordable prices. This edition, with a fairly strong introduction by Pamela Knights, a professor at the institution where I took my master's degree, reproduces the `asterisk clouds' and chapter separations found in the original release and often deleted in modern reprintings of the novella. The cover art is excellently suited to the contents, the back cover material is well written and accurate, and the scholarly notes at the end are helpful without becoming pedantic. Hats off to one of my favorite publishers for another job well done!
I recommend this book to those who enjoy pastoral and anti-pastoral, as there are arguments for this book belonging to both camps. Wharton fans, American literature buffs, appreciators of realism, and readers with shorter attention spans would also be encouraged to pick up Ethan Frome and hole up alongside of Ethan, Zeena, and Mattie in their claustrophobic farmhouse.
This is a wonderfully depressing story about a romantic love that couldn't be. While I found it somewhat laborious, I am glad I read it and at just under 100 pages, it did not take too long to read it. The story is cleverly written, although those seeking a breezy read will be somewhat disappointed. That said, anyone who has suffered in romance will find this alluring.
This novel was required reading in my high school back in the 1960's. I'm glad, because it was, and still is, one of my very favorite books of all time and I am a well read person (Note my license plate reads B1G READ). Back in high school, I wanted to name my son, if I had one, Ethan. (I had three, but, unfortunately, they were all named names starting with "M". I regret that!)
"Ethan Frome" is a great advisory tale of what might happen when you do not listen to your heart and follow it.
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