University Press of Virginia, 514 pp., $14.95 (paper)
Viking, 405 pp., $22.00
Columbia Pictures
Newmarket Press, 190 pp., $49.50
Collier, 366 pp., $9.00 (paper)
'A Whartonfest is upon us,' Kate Muir predicted in the London Observer in August. She meant on the screen: Scorsese's monumental, heartbreaking The Age of Innocence was about to open, and other Wharton films were projected or already available on video. She put down Wharton's revived popularity to the fact that all but one of E.M. Forster's novels are now completed, so the studios need a new source for upmarket costume drama. There could be other reasons: Wharton's feminism, for one. In The Age of Innocence Scorsese pans in as the hero declares that women should have the same rights as men.
Review, 2879 words
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