Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Published loading...Updated

Lost Edith Wharton WWI Story Published after a Century

The unfinished story shifts from New York society to a French chateau near battle lines, where civilians and soldiers mix as war sounds nearby.

  • On Friday, The Strand Magazine released "The Men Who Saved," an unfinished and previously unpublished story by Edith Wharton, joining rare works by Mark Twain and Ernest Hemingway in the publication.
  • When World War broke out in 1914, Wharton lived in Paris and responded as a citizen and witness, establishing hostels for refugees and reporting from trenches for Scribner Magazine before channeling these experiences into fiction.
  • American nurse Milly Arden attends a dinner party at the home of Fred and Madge Upshall, where she sits beside Capt. Sherman Wake, regarded by Mrs. Upshall as one of the "real people."
  • Wake tells Arden about the "catastrophic horror and waste" he has witnessed, and when she asks if the guns rattle the windows, she responds, "Yes, they do," while gazing at an orchid displaced by the cannonade.
  • Wharton scholar Julie Olin-Ammentorp noted the author's deep affinity for France, calling it "one of the greatest cultures in the world," though she remains unsure why Wharton never finished the manuscript believed written in 1918.
Insights by Ground AI

30 Articles

Associated Press NewsAssociated Press News
+23 Reposted by 23 other sources
Lean Left

A rare Edith Wharton story is unearthed about the gap between everyday life and the horrors of WWI

A rare Edith Wharton short story has just been published. It appears in the new issue of The Strand Magazine.

·New York, United States
Read Full Article
Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

  • 46% of the sources lean Left
46% Left

Factuality Info Icon

To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

Ownership

Info Icon

To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage

Yale University broke the news on Friday, December 14, 2018.
Too Big Arrow Icon
Sources are mostly out of (0)

Similar News Topics

News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal