Edith Wharton (1862–1937) was an American novelist, short-story writer, and designer. Among the most famous of her many novels are The House of Mirth, Ethan Frome, The Custom of the Country, and The Age of Innocence, for which she received the Pulitzer Prize in 1921, the first woman to do so. In 2007 NYRB Classics published a collection of her short stories, The New York Stories of Edith Wharton.
"Wharton was not an avowed believer, but like many writers she
found the ghost story to be the perfect medium (pun intended) for
exploring questions of sexuality, class and consciousness. And
given her mastery of all three subjects it should come as no
surprise that the stories in this collection are a paradigm not
just of the genre but of short fiction generally." —Sadie
Stein, The New York Times
“It’s this alertness to the terror of being a stranger in one’s own
house, in one’s own self, that makes Wharton such a fine and
frightening writer of ghost stories.” —Hermione Lee, The New York
Review of Books
“A master of the form. . . . [Ghosts] is a bewitching, and
frequently terrifying, collection of tales which more often than
not fulfill [Wharton’s] criterion for a successful ghost story: ‘If
it sends a cold shiver down one’s spine, it has done its job and
done it well.’ . . . Reading the stories, I sometimes felt like I
had discovered a hidden room in an impeccable house, and turned to
find that the door had shut behind me.” —Anna Russell, The New
Yorker
“Wharton seems to have been aware that in her ghost stories, she
had tapped into something essential yet hidden about modern life. .
. . In Ghosts, Wharton’s characters carry with them not only what
was inflicted upon them, but what they have inflicted upon others,
however unknowingly.” —Jack Hanson, The Baffler
“These ghost stories are not mere genre, not chills and thrills.
They are about the liberty of the form itself. . . . I believe that
these macabre stories were, for Edith Wharton, another way out,
another departure and yet another entry into the penetrating
observations on the destructive powers of human possession, the
aftermath of dispossession and the haunting power of love.”
—Maureen Howard
“A blend of Poe, Hawthorne and Henry James, [Wharton] has a
lightness of touch that belies the often very grisly tale.” —Kate
Mosse, The Guardian
“Mysterious and coolly menacing stories of the supernatural.” —Dan
Chaon, The Week
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