Penguin Classics cover of Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton, 1911. |
Edith Wharton at her desk. |
Poor Ethan Frome! The guy can’t catch a break! His parents’
illnesses force him to return to his family’s farm. After both of his parents
die, he then has to take care of his wife Zeena, who is bedeviled by a number
of non-specific ailments. Zeena’s cousin, Mattie Silver, comes to the Frome’s
farm to help with the household chores and to take care of Zeena. Mattie is
everything Zeena is not—vivacious, lively, and kind to Ethan. Naturally, Ethan
falls in love with Mattie.
Ethan Frome, the
novella by Edith Wharton, first published in 1911, tells the tale of Ethan’s
secret love for Mattie. The setting is the appropriately named Starkfield, and
Ethan’s farm on the outskirts of the village itself. Starkfield is a barren
place, and Wharton’s evocative descriptions of the weather and landscape are
superb. Here’s just one example:
“The cold was less sharp than earlier in the day and a thick
fleecy sky threatened snow for the morrow. Here and there a star pricked
through, showing behind it a deep well of blue. In an hour or two the moon
would push over the ridge behind the farm, burn a gold-edged rent in the
clouds, and then be swallowed by them.” (p.57)
Wharton does an excellent job of getting into the mind of
Ethan Frome. The book is a testament to Wharton’s skill as an author, as she is
able to convincingly portray the feelings and emotions of people so different
from herself. Yes, that’s what great authors do, but some do it better than
others, and here Wharton does it very well indeed.
One thing that Edith Wharton did have in common with Ethan
Frome was an unhappy marriage. Born Edith Newbold Jones in 1862, she married
Edward “Teddy” Wharton in 1885. It was quickly evident that their marriage was
to be passionless. Teddy suffered greatly from depression, and the marriage
ended when Edith divorced him in 1912. Perhaps some of Edith’s own feelings of martial
dissatisfaction were channeled into the character of Ethan Frome.
Ethan Frome is
often compared to Wharton’s 1917 novel Summer,
which I reviewed here. Both books take place in rural New England, far away
from the New York Gilded Age society that Wharton is so famous for portraying. Both
novels include vivid descriptions of the natural landscape, and they both
highlight the limited options available to their characters. Summer is a more hopeful book than Ethan Frome, but there are definitely similarities
between Charity Royall, the main character in Summer, and Mattie Silver. Both young women are essentially
orphaned—Mattie’s
parents are both dead, while Charity has not seen her parents for many years,
although her mother is still alive. Mattie and Charity have had limited
educational opportunities, and they have few options available to them in their
stories.
The edition of Ethan
Frome that I read was the Collier’s paperback from 1987, which featured a
ridiculous afterword by noted literary critic Alfred Kazin. First Kazin writes
that the book is “an American classic.” (p.131) Then he goes on to say that the
novel is actually not as good as Madame
Bovary or Anna Karenina, and,
well, Wharton is a good writer, but she’s not as good as her friend Henry
James. Kazin writes that “If Edith Wharton was not the equal of her good friend
Henry James…she was above all a consummate professional.” (p.134) You could
call genre fiction writers like Sidney Sheldon and Clive Cussler consummate
professionals, but to call Edith Wharton a consummate professional is just an
insult masquerading as faint praise. Edith Wharton was a serious literary
writer who also achieved a great deal of popular acclaim. That’s more than just
“a consummate professional.” Kazin’s essay quickly becomes tiresome, and it
makes you wonder why he’s writing about Wharton at all if he feels so lukewarm
about her. Fortunately, Kazin’s essay doesn’t detract from the wonderful
writing and compelling story in Ethan
Frome.
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