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Hudson River Bracketed
by Edith Wharton
In Hudson River Bracketed, Edith Wharton offers a fiction first published in 1929. Edith Wharton uses the form to consider human motives, relationships, conflict, and the consequences of choice, keeping the emphasis on how ideas become choices, conflicts, and consequences. Rather than depending on topical novelty, the book builds its interest through the interaction of character, situation, and idea. Form and tone matter throughout, with a character-centered narrative style that rewards attention to voice, structure, and perspective. At roughly 172,310 words with a fairly easy reading profile, it offers a reading commitment that is easy to judge before beginning while still leaving room for close attention. Readers still return to it because of its capacity to make unfamiliar lives and difficult choices emotionally legible. For modern readers, the pleasure comes from entering its particular world while noticing how its central concerns still shape personal and public life. Because the work leaves space for judgment rather than reducing its ideas to a simple lesson, different readers may find different points of emphasis within it.
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