Manhattan Monologues: Stories

by Louis Auchincloss

Hardcover, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Collection

Publication

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2002), Hardcover, 226 pages

Description

From a New York Times-bestselling author, short stories of the privileged class, spanning a century of New York history:"Urbane, humorous . . . a treat to read." --Library Journal Sublime master of manners, exquisite critic of the upper crust, and beloved American author Louis Auchincloss is at his wry, brilliant best with this collection of ten short stories about New York aristocracy.   Drawing on a century of Manhattan high society, Auchincloss weaves a set of perfectly crafted, intimate portrayals of the struggles and dramas of the elite. From a woman faced with choosing love or prestige when marrying to a man torn between loyalty to his family and country when called to war to a matchmaker handling a rogue romance, these glamorous yet all-too-human tales present a remarkable tableau of the American upper class.   A series of "finely etched portraits of the kind of men we've become used to meeting in [Auchincloss's] fiction," Manhattan Monologues stands as a remarkable achievement of short fiction, a legend of American letters at his insightful best (The New York Times Book Review).   "For the sheer elegance of his prose, Louis Auchincloss deserves a large and enthusiastic following." --The Baltimore Sun… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member etxgardener
No one is better at portraying old, upper class New York than Louis Auchincloss - maybe because he was of that class and could observe their comings and going with the gimlet eye that renders his tales so amusing.

Here is the old WASP ruling class at work and play. I'm assuming they still exist is
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one form or another, although they have mostly be overtaken by the new class of billionaires who don't share their old fashioned values, and even in these stories their decline is foretold. Read and enjoy the view of a vanishing world.
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Language

Original publication date

2002

Physical description

240 p.; 8.55 inches

ISBN

061815289X / 9780618152896

UPC

046442152891
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