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The Fruit of the Tree (Virago Modern…
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The Fruit of the Tree (Virago Modern Classics) (1907 original; edición 1984)

por Edith Wharton

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1785152,718 (3.8)52
Fiction. Romance. HTML:

Brimming with romance and important social questions, Edith Wharton's novel The Fruit of the Tree offers something for everyone. The story expertly weaves themes of workers' rights, medical ethics, and end-of-life care into the framework of a conventionalâ??but pulse-poundingâ??romantic entanglement… (más)

Miembro:lauralkeet
Título:The Fruit of the Tree (Virago Modern Classics)
Autores:Edith Wharton
Información:Penguin books (1984), Edition: New Ed, Paperback, 656 pages
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca, Por leer, Virago Modern Classics, North American
Valoración:
Etiquetas:tbr, fiction, virago, own, woman authors, american authors

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The Fruit of the Tree por Edith Wharton (1907)

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Mostrando 5 de 5
This is a lesser known novel by Edith Wharton that nevertheless has her characteristic deep dive into her characters' motivations and a look at social issues. In this novel, Wharton tackles two big issues of the day - the plight of factory workers and what the responsibility of the owners should be to improve their lives, and end of life decisions regarding prolonging a painful life through medication vs. choosing to end it.

Pretty different topics, right? And the novel is a bit like that. The first third has a pretty thorough focus on factory life and owner responsibility, the middle third becomes more of a bad marriage story, and the end is a happy ending disrupted by this end of life issue. Wharton does manage to tie it all together with some well thought out and developed characters, but I thought it was less successful than some of her other masterpieces.

There is still plenty to enjoy and appreciate here, but I wouldn't recommend it as a place to start with Wharton's writing. ( )
  japaul22 | Dec 20, 2022 |
10. The Fruit of the Tree by Edith Wharton
published: 1907
format: Kindle Public Domain ebook, I'm calling it 400 pages
acquired: November, read: Feb 6 – Mar 17, time reading: 15:13, 2.3 mpp
rating: 4½
genre/style: novel theme Wharton
locations: New York City and a fictional factory town in Massachusetts
about the author: about the author: 1862-1937. Born Edith Newbold Jones on West 23rd Street, New York City. Relocated permanently to France after 1911.

Ah, Justine.

On Litsy we were comparing Wharton to Willa Cather, because the same group read Cather previously. They are such different writers. Wharton was born into the New York City leisure class, whereas Willa Cather grew up in Nebraska, was educated in Lincoln before coming to New York City to write. They both overlapped as New York City writers in the early 1900's, before Wharton left for France permanently around 1911, and both were deeply influenced by Henry James (Wharton was a personal friend of his.). Of course, Wharton wrote of her own class, critically, making her a very jaded writer, even if sharp and elegant. Cather began by writing about this leisure class too, before exploring her own roots, and even turning spiritual in her own way. I told the group I see Wharton as insistent, needing to convince (us, the reader, and also the world). Whereas I see Cather accepting that you, reader, are probably never going to change and see it her way.

Justine. Justine is the most Wharton-like character I've come across in her books. She was born in the leisure class, but she works for a living. She's a nurse, self-sufficient, and not married, and not in any rush to get married although she's looking around. She's practical, sharp, well read, philosophical, and an independent thinker in every way. The odd structure of this book puts her in the opening seen, caring for a patient, and then leaves her mostly alone, a secondary character, for a long time, before putting her out in front again, in all her wit and flaws.

Our nurse is taking care of a mangled factory worker and the novel begins with a look at the abuse of factory labor for profit, almost an exposé. But it turns to the owners of these factories, the leisure class. And Wharton studies them, putting a widow in an accidental ownership role she's completely unsuited to, letting things play out. She studies all her characters, but especially looks into these different women and their contradictory expectations. Our widow, Bessy: "Isn't she one of the most harrowing victims of the plan of bringing up our girls in the double bondage of expediency and unreality, corrupting their bodies with luxury and their brains with sentiment, and leaving them to reconcile the two as best they can, or lose their souls in the attempt."

The novel never solves the paternalistic perspectives on the factory workers, ever viewed as "these dim creatures of the underworld," but it does work on marriage, ethics, and the conflicts of idealism and practical reality. Her study of marriage is quite magnificent, capturing that bewildering unintended failure to communicate. The novel is all over in several interesting places. As I put it in Litsy, it‘s not just how many different unexpected turns this novel‘s focus takes, but how thought provoking each is. It led to a lot of discussion.

It's a difficult book to review. A plot summary is really difficult as the plot is just complicated, and it's nearly impossible to avoid spoilers. But there is a lot of good stuff in this rather obscure book. It's a bit long (although the 600-pages editions are really misleading. It's not _that_ long. I read this in less time than I read [The House of Mirth]), so recommended to the curious and committed.

2022
https://www.librarything.com/topic/337810#7799631 ( )
1 vota dchaikin | Mar 29, 2022 |
This is definitely NOT a typical Edith Wharton novel. Instead of the foibles of the aristocracy of New York Cit, we have a book that is part a muckraking polemic on the evils of manufacturing and part lurid love story laced with adultery, drug addiction and euthanasia. Quite the topics for 1907!

John Amherst, the reform-minded assistant manager at the Hanaford textile mills, meets trained nurse Justine Brent at the hospital bedside of Dillon, an injured mill worker. They agree that Dillon would be better off dead if he cannot return to the job. Their discussion of euthanasia, sets up the novel's major incident.

Meanwhile, Amherst is asked show the mills to the new owner, Bessy Langhope Westmore, who a wealthy young widow with a young daughter. During the course of later meetings over the fate of the workers, Bessy falls in love with Amherst. Thinking that she shares his idealistic social vision and concern for the workers, Amherst marries her and begins his campaign of reforming the mills.

However, he runs into opposition from Bessy's father and her lawyer who think that all this reforming will eat into Bessy's income. After the death of their infant son, Bessy and Amherst become increasingly estranged, and he spends longer and longer periods absent from home immersed in his work. When he is home he & , Justine meet and discussed conditions in the mills. He comes to regard her as a friend. who understands him as opposed to Bessy who lives more and more for her own pleasure.

Bessy recognizes that Amherst is drifting away from her. Hurt by his indifference, she starts going to parties with the disreputable Mrs. Fenton Carbury and indulges herself in planning a "pleasure-house." Bessy has also renewed her friendship with Justine, who tacitly understands the situation. Seeing the two drift apart and urged on by Mrs. Ansell, an older friend of Bessy's, Justine writes to Amherst that he should return home. Hurt by Amherst's refusal to do so, Bessy rides over icy roads on her horse, and suffers a near-fatal spinal injury

Justine watches Bessy suffer helplessly at the hands of Dr. Wyant, an ambitious young doctor determined to keep his patient alive at all costs. Justine recalls her discussion with Amherst about euthanasia, and moved by Bessy's plight, she administers an overdose of morphine to Bessy.

After Bessy's death, Justine and Amherst marry, but their happiness is short-lived.because Dr. Wyant, now addicted to morphine, threatens to expose Justine's action and blackmails her. Soon he will no longer be bought off by the small sums that Justine has sent him and she must tell Amherst the truth. He is appalled at her action and she sacrifices her own happiness and leaves.

When Bessy's daughter Cicely falls ill and pines for Justine, Amherst seeks Justine out and they reconcile, but not happily for long. .

Amherst finds a set of plans for Bessy's pleasure-house and mistakes them for a new recreation hall for the millworkers and believes Bessy had at last learned to share his compassionate attitude toward the workers in the mill. When he asks Justine about Bessy's motives for building the gymnasium, Justine, who knows the truth, nonetheless lies to preserve his illusions. With the specter of the now-idealized Bessy between them, however, Justine and Amherst can never again live in the total happiness of their first few months together. Wharton has clearly written a book ahead of it's time. ( )
  etxgardener | Jun 16, 2017 |
I do not know why i love these Wharton books so much....it is something about the overly long sentences that read so naturally that you don't realize how long they are....the way she is able to convey so much in merely the description of one's face...the fascinating world of upper class 'manners' of that period.......and i could go on and on......I'm gonna be disappointed when i have completed all of her books....gonna space the remaining volumes out over time.....i just don't want them to end! ( )
1 vota jeffome | Feb 15, 2010 |
Although not as beautifully rendered as her more well-known works (such as House of Mirth, Age of Innocence, and Custom of the Country), The Fruit of the Tree is still a gripping story, with all of the miscommunication and heartache that one would expect in any novel by Wharton. In this case, the story follows John Amherst, a visionary trying to carry out plans for industrial renewal while building a life for himself with his wife. The story looks at the problem of communicating higher ideals to those whose sole concern is with immediate profit from a more personal level than is usual; the fact that the protagonist is neither the owner of the factory nor a low-level worker is also somewhat unusual and makes for a novel perspective.

Running alongside and among the story of the mills is the story of Amherst's relationships- with society, with his wife, and with his family. Wharton is in her element here, as she draws well-developed characters and then proceeds to let them destroy each other in that way that only people can. Miscommunication, often due to societal constraints, is really the heart of the novel, and Wharton does an excellent job of demonstrating how easy it is to ruin another person simply by not saying that which you mean, or by allowing prejudice and pride impede actions and speech.

As is typical, The Fruit of the Tree does not have a very happy ending, though it is somewhat less tragic than many of Wharton's other novels. Sort of. But not really. ( )
  Kplatypus | Jan 14, 2008 |
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Edith Whartonautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
French, MarilynIntroducciónautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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In the surgical ward of the Hope Hospital at Hanaford, a nurse was bending over a young man whose bandaged right hand and arm lay stretched along the bed.
The Fruit of the Tree is an engrossing novel. (Introduction)
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Fiction. Romance. HTML:

Brimming with romance and important social questions, Edith Wharton's novel The Fruit of the Tree offers something for everyone. The story expertly weaves themes of workers' rights, medical ethics, and end-of-life care into the framework of a conventionalâ??but pulse-poundingâ??romantic entanglement

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