The Children
FICTION_GENERAL

The Children

by Wharton, Edith

Publisher
Kessinger Pub Co
Pages
352
Language
English
Published
1985

Overview

1928. Wharton, an American author, is best known for her stories and ironic novels about upper class people. Wharton's central subjects were the conflict between social and individual fulfillment, repressed sexuality, and the manners of old families and the nouveau riche, who had made their fortunes in more recent years. Among her numerous novels, short stories, and travel writings The House of Mirth, Ethan Frome, and the Pulitzer prize-winning Age of Innocence are her best remembered. A bestseller when it was first published, The Children is a comic, bittersweet novel about the misadventures of a bachelor and a band of precocious children. The seven Wheater children, stepbrothers and stepsisters grown weary of being shuttled from parent to parent are eager for their parents' latest reconciliation to last. A chance meeting between the children and the solitary 46-year old Martin Boyne leads to a series of unforgettable encounters. See other titles by this author available from Kessinger Publishing.

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