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Ethan Frome
- Narrated by: Anne Makoto
- Length: 3 hrs and 20 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Ethan Frome (1911) by Edith Wharton is a framed narrative - a story within a story. Unlike the upper class characters in the rest of Wharton’s works, here they are ordinary townspeople. The story begins with an unnamed male narrator who describes a man with a limp and a striking demeanor. The story of Ethan, his sickly wife Zeena, and the caregiver Mattie then unfolds: Mattie helped to care for the infirm Zeena, but when Zeena noticed a spark of affection between her husband and Mattie, she demanded that the caregiver be dismissed. When the aforementioned narrator resumes, it emerges that Mattie was severely injured 20 years earlier in the accident which caused Ethan’s limp as well as a startling role reversal among the two women.
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Overall
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- Anonymous User
- 23-09-2023
Frozen passion in a wintry landscape
This tale of inarticulate yearnings and a growing passion unexpressed in the face of 19th century Massachusetts small town morality is a cautionary tale. Edith Wharton writes beautifully, but she warns of a bleak fate: to fail to express the truth within the human spirit is to make life no more than a delay before death. A short novel which makes a profound point. In doing so it evokes the mood and simplicity of an Ingmar Bergman film,
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