

Go here: http://classics.rebeccareid.com/ for details. :D
Dammit, I just looked at the blog and this is two days late! I thought I was scheduled for the 15th, not the 13th - really sorry!
Dammit, I just looked at the blog and this is two days late! I thought I was scheduled for the 15th, not the 13th - really sorry!
Um. The nicest thing I can say about Sanctuary is that I finished it. It's 94 pages long, and it really kind of dragged.
I understand it's an early work of Wharton's and I haven't read anything else by her, so I can't compare, but Sanctuary - to me - read like a tired, dry little morality tale. And it IS a morality tale, but I felt like I was eating sand. Which could have been my mood, or the fact I nearly fell asleep while I was tring to finish it, or any one of a dozen things.
Kate Orme is about to get married when her husband-to-be lets her in on a family secret that is set to inform the rest of Kate's life.
She chooses to marry Denis Petyon anyway, and the story picks up in the future - Denis having passed away several years ago, leaving Kate to raise their son, Dick.
A rising architect, Dick finds himself with a moral dilemma after the death of a friend and colleague.
There's a lot going on for such a short piece, but I nearly found myself skimming parts of it that felt more like exposition than anything. The best thing in Sanctuary is Clement Verney - a young woman of unashamed ambition, who breathes life into the pages and the characters.
4/10 Why am I here?
Aw! Sorry this wasn't better for you. I've never read any Waugh, but he seems to be a love-him-or-hate-him kind of guy.
ReplyDeleteWharton is the queen of the moral dilemma! I like that, but I can see how it's not everyone's cup of tea!
ReplyDeleteThanks for joining the Circuit, and don't worry about posting late. Not a big deal.
PS. in the title, you have "Evelyn Waugh" which I assume was a mistake?
rebeccareid What??? Oops! I'll fix that now.
ReplyDeleteOh no, sad this one didn't work out for you. I think I've picked my next Wharton book from recommendations on this tour.
ReplyDeleteI had the same kind of experience reading "Madame de Treymes" for the tour. Wharton probably deserves her Classics status, but I think she is definitely an acquired taste.
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