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Early Autumn: A Story of a Lady par Louis…
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Early Autumn: A Story of a Lady (édition 2000)

par Louis Bromfield (Auteur)

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2516106,436 (3.56)17
A forthright woman disrupts the social order of upper crust New England in this Pulitzer Prize-winning family saga. Tracing their lineage back to its colonial founders, the Pentland family of Durham, Massachusetts, is committed to preserving the "old ways." But time has its own way of moving restlessly forward. Patriarch John Pentland never understood why his niece Sabine married a man so beneath them. Now, after escaping to Europe twenty years ago, the black sheep has returned. And she's determined to present her eighteen-year-old daughter to society. Sabine Callendar is not the humble, broken creature the Pentlands expected. In fact, she has no trouble holding them accountable, skewering the hypocrisies of a society that once tormented her. As long-held secrets come to light the Pentlands, and the legacy of their name, will be changed forever… (plus d'informations)
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Titre:Early Autumn: A Story of a Lady
Auteurs:Louis Bromfield (Auteur)
Info:Wooster Book Co. (2000), 312 pages
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Early Autumn won the Pultzer in 1927and is very much a product of it's era. It's a gentle story about a wealthy family in New England. The characters are well-drawn and the story of their relationships interesting enough to keep me reading. ( )
  RebaRelishesReading | Sep 29, 2012 |
Life for society women in the 1920s had its own constraints, the image of "family" was stronger than "self" and women's freedom didn't exist yet.

In "Early Autumn, " the Pulitzer Prize winner of 1927, we have a story of a wealthy family, its place in the society of the times and the rigid rules of family members who are almost members of the aristocracy of New England.

The story opens with the celebration of Olivia Pentland's daughter, Sybil's being presented to Boston society. Also being presented is her friend and neighbor, Therese Callendar.

It is evident that Olivia is the strength of the family. She hasn't reached age forty and has little time for herself. Her husband spends most of his time in his Boston office, working with charities or on family genealogy. He gets an income from his elderly father, who doesn't trust him to run the family business.

At a time without television, one means for entertainment for society women was to visit with their friends and learn the latest gossip. This is the case for Aunt Cassie (the family busy body) and Sabine Callendar. These women don't like each other and the author compares them to a couple of cats, eyeing each other for days at a time, stealthily.

Bromfield's wit is evident when we read of Aunt Cassie talking about joining her late husband in heaven. Sabine tells us her feeling that, based on how her husband tried to stay away from Cassie in life, the reunion might not be as pleasant as she expects.

Olivia seems forced to live in a world filled with traditions but little love. She does see her daughter trying to escape from this family web and it gives her hope.

She meets a man who brings the thrill of love and a new meaning of life. But, can a woman of society in the 1920s ask for divorce? What if her husband refuses?

This was an interesting story, to see how society acted almost one hundred years ago and how things have changed. ( )
1 voter mikedraper | Aug 25, 2012 |
Early Autumn won the Pulitzer in 1926, and like many of the Pulitzer winners around this time, the focus was much more on the story than the storytelling. Unfortunately, the story being told was one that's been told a million times before. Woman marries into wealthy and prestigious family. Her husband is cold and indifferent. She falls in love with a lowly farmhand. They promise to run away together. Instead, they don't.

There are 4 similar books I can think of off hand that tell a similar story but are much more engaging. ( )
  agnesmack | Sep 6, 2011 |
Pulitzer Prize winner for 1927.

Durham, Massachusetts, is an outpost for the old, wealthy families of Boston, such as the Pentlands, who live in a mansion of the same name. The story recounts the lives of the Pentlands in post World War I Durham during late summer and early fall, mostly from the point of view of Olivia, the 40 year old wife of Anson Pentland.There are unwelcome changes to the neighborhood and to the lives of the Pentlands, coming in the form of Sabine Callender, sister of Anson, who is the “black sheep” of the family, returning to Pentlands after a scandalous 20 year absence and in Michael O’Hara, a self-made Irishman who has risen to wealth and political prominence--but who is definitely not socially acceptable. Tragedies interrupt the placid existence at Pentlands, as the different generations of Pentlands react to these events in their own ways.

The book has no real plot as such but rather it is an examination of the lives of the very rich who claim distinction through family during the early 20th century. The result is an indictment of meaningless lives, where people of all but the latest generation exist rather than live. Contrasted with these desiccated survivors of an old New England family is the vitality of O’Hare, an upstart, a “shanty Irish”, who does not have the purity of blood to sully the Pentland name.

Women are the main protagonists: besides Olivia, there is Aunt Cassie, who is the arbiter of the family morals and “standards;” Sabine, who hates everything her family stands for and longs to destroy them; and Sybil, Olivia’s daughter, who symbolizes the hope of escape from the stultifying existence of Pentland expectations. These and other characters, however, with the exception of Olivia, are caricatures, one-dimensional, in Bromfield’s remorseless attack on upper-class lives. Everyone is a stereotype, although a well-drawn stereotype.

Bromfield’s use of language is stunning. His prose drifts, ephemeral, insubstantial--just like the lives of the Pentlands. Olivia speaks repeatedly of living in an “enchantment” that numbs her life. The landscape around Durham is without color, as are the Pentlands.

While brilliantly written, in the end I found the book unsatisfying. It was just too much of meaninglessness, endlessly repeated, with the characters insufficiently complex to sustain my interest. In the end, they all behave predictably, from Old John Pentland, the patriarch, down to Sybil. This may have been Bromfield’s intent, to draw characters so devoid of life in order to rip away any pretense of glamor surrounding the Old Rich, and it may have been novel during the Roaring Twenties, but in today’s cynical world, the book doesn’t hold up. But as an example of near-perfect writing, where the author totally bends his prose to his intent, Early Autumn is hard to match. ( )
  Joycepa | Jul 23, 2009 |
Similar to Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton and The Late George Appley by John Marquand - blending New England character with unrequited love. ( )
  Kelberts | Sep 10, 2007 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Bromfield, LouisAuteurauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Roederer, ClaudeIllustrateurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Bay, AndréPréfaceauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Chapelot, PierreIllustrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Pinkney, JeromeIllustrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Wailly, Lucette Baillon deTraductionauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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There was a ball in the old Pentland house because for the first time in nearly forty years there was a young girl in the family to be introduced to the polite world of Boston and to the elect who had been asked to come on from New York and Philadelphia.
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A forthright woman disrupts the social order of upper crust New England in this Pulitzer Prize-winning family saga. Tracing their lineage back to its colonial founders, the Pentland family of Durham, Massachusetts, is committed to preserving the "old ways." But time has its own way of moving restlessly forward. Patriarch John Pentland never understood why his niece Sabine married a man so beneath them. Now, after escaping to Europe twenty years ago, the black sheep has returned. And she's determined to present her eighteen-year-old daughter to society. Sabine Callendar is not the humble, broken creature the Pentlands expected. In fact, she has no trouble holding them accountable, skewering the hypocrisies of a society that once tormented her. As long-held secrets come to light the Pentlands, and the legacy of their name, will be changed forever

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Une jeune femme, mariée au dernier rejeton d'une vieille dynastie de la Nouvelle-Angleterre, découvre l'enfer derrière la façade de respectabilité et de puritanisme de sa nouvelle famille. Lucide, elle manquera cependant de la force nécessaire pour s opposer et n'aura ensuite de cesse que de permettre à sa fille devenue adolescente, d'échapper à une telle prison : un combat, dans une « bonne » société américaine à la violence bien réelle, autrement plus risqué qu'elle n'aurait pu l'imaginer...
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