Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: Wharton and James
1. The “Fictioning” of Henry James in Wharton’s “The Hermit and the Wild Woman” and “Ogrin the Hermit”
2. The Give-and-Take between Edith Wharton and Henry James: “The Velvet Glove” and Edith Wharton
3. The Metamorphoses of Edith Wharton in Henry James’s Finer Grain Stories
4. Jamesian Structures in The Age of Innocence and Related Stories
5. “Bad” Mothers and Daughters in the Fiction of Wharton and James
6. Wharton and James: Some Additional Literary Give-and-Take
7. Henry James’s “Julia Bride”: A Source for Chapter 9 in Edith Wharton’s The Custom of the Country
Part Two: Wharton and Others
8. Edith Wharton and Paul Bourget: Literary Exchanges
9. The Portrait of Edith in Bourget’s “L’Indicatrice”
10. Madame de Treymes Corrects Bourget’s Un Divorce
11. Two Novels of the “Relatively Poor”: George Gissing’s New Grub Street and The House of Mirth
12. Edith Wharton and F. Marion Crawford
13. Edith Wharton and Grace Aguilar: Mothers, Daughters, and Incest in the Late Novels of Edith Wharton
14. Edith Wharton, Ernest Hemingway, and Vivienne de Watteville, Speak to the Earth
15. Hugh Walpole’s All Souls’ Night and Edith Wharton’s “All Souls’”
16. Consuelo Vanderbilt, John Esquemeling, and The Buccaneers
Part Three: Wharton’s Uses of Art
17. False Dawn and the Irony of Taste Changes in Art
18. Correggio and Rossetti in The Buccaneers: Tradition and Revolution in the Patterns of Love
19. Tiepolo’s Ceiling in the Church of the Scalzi and The Glimpses of the Moon: The Importance of Home
Part Four: Literary Lives of Wharton
20. A Poet’s Version of Edith Wharton: Richard Howard’s The Lesson of the Master
21. Louis Auchincloss Deconstructs the Biography of Edith Wharton: From Invented Ediths to Her Real Self: Justice to Teddy Wharton in “The Arbiter”
22. The Punishment of Morton Fullerton in “The ‘Fulfillment’ of Grace Eliot”
23. Morton Fullerton’s View of the Affair in “They That Have Power to Hurt”
24. The “Real” Mrs. Wharton in The Education of Oscar Fairfax
25. Edith Wharton as Herself in Carol DeChellis Hill’s Henry James’s Midnight Song
26. Cathleen Schine’s The Love Letter
Part Five: The Legacy of Wharton’s Fiction: Three Rewritings
27. Louis Auchincloss Reinvents Edith Wharton’s “After Holbein”
28. Daniel Magida’s The Rules of Seduction and The Age of Innocence
29. Lev Raphael’s The Edith Wharton Murders
Appendix: A Book and Four Friends: Henry James, Walter Berry, Edith Wharton, and W. Morton Fullerton
Index