Edith Wharton
America's Most Famous Woman Of Letters, And The First Woman To Win The Pulitzer Prize, Edith Wharton Was Born Into One Of The Last "Leisured Class" Families In New York City, As She Put It, In 1862. Educated Privately, She Was Married To Edward Wharton In 1885, And For The Next Few Years, They Spent Their Time In The High Society Of Newport (Rhode Island), Then Lenox (Massachusetts) And Europe. It Was In Europe That Wharton First Met Henry James, Who Was To Have A Profound And Lasting Influence On Her Life And Work. Wharton's First Published Book Was A Work Of Nonfiction, In Collaboration With
Wharton Edith:
Madame de Treymes and Two Novellas
Read by: Anna Fields
Blackstone Audiobooks , 2007
Wharton Edith:
Summer
Dover Thrift Editions
Dover Publications , 2006
Quality paperback, 127 pages
Wharton Edith:
The Age of Innocence
Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations (Hardcover)
Editor: Harold Bloom
Chelsea House Publications , 2005
Hardcover, 205 pages
Wharton Edith:
Edith Wharton: Selected Poems
American Poets Project( 18)
Editor: Louis Auchincloss
Library Of America , 2005
Hardcover, 183 pages
Wharton Edith:
Ethan Frome
Enriched Classics (Pocket)
Pocket Books , 2004
Mass paperback, 182 pages
Wharton Edith:
The Age of Innocence (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
Introduction by: Maureen Howard
Barnes & Noble Classics , 2004
Quality paperback, 352 pages
Wharton Edith:
Ethan Frome & Selected Stories (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
Introduction by: Kent Ljungquist
Barnes & Noble Classics , 2004
Quality paperback, 272 pages








