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The Age of Innocence By: Edith Wharton

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Manage episode 485869832 series 3667222
Content provided by The Book was Better than the Movie. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Book was Better than the Movie or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Step into the opulent world of 1870s New York high society that Martin Scorsese brought to breathtaking cinematic life, starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Winona Ryder in one of Hollywood's most acclaimed period dramas. Experience Edith Wharton's Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece through our luxurious audiobook that delivers every nuance of forbidden passion, social intrigue, and heart-wrenching sacrifice that made this novel irresistible to filmmakers.

Discover the complete story behind Scorsese's visually stunning adaptation—a tale of dangerous attraction and suffocating social conventions that reads like a Victorian-era "Dangerous Liaisons." Wharton's original novel contains layers of psychological complexity, subtle eroticism, and razor-sharp social commentary that even the most sophisticated Hollywood productions could only hint at through lingering glances and unspoken desires.

The film captures the sumptuous ballrooms and elaborate dinner parties, but only Wharton's prose reveals the full intensity of Newland Archer's internal torment as he's torn between duty to his innocent fiancée May and his consuming desire for the mysterious Countess Ellen Olenska. Experience the complete emotional devastation that Daniel Day-Lewis portrayed so powerfully, with every suppressed longing and moral struggle laid bare through Wharton's exquisite psychological insight.

From the glittering opera boxes of old New York to the hidden tensions behind parlor room conversations, this is a story of passion constrained by society's unforgiving rules—the kind of dramatic tension that Hollywood loves but that only literature can fully explore. Witness the elaborate social chess game where a single misstep could destroy reputations, the coded language of desire, and the tragic beauty of love that cannot be fulfilled.

Whether you're captivated by period dramas like "Downton Abbey," mesmerized by Scorsese's meticulous attention to historical detail, or drawn to stories of forbidden romance and moral complexity, this audiobook offers the complete literary experience that inspired one of cinema's most elegant and heartbreaking adaptations.

Listen now to the novel that proved love stories could be as sophisticated as they are devastating, and discover why Wharton's tale of sacrifice and desire continues to mesmerize both readers and filmmakers over a century later.

  continue reading

29 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 485869832 series 3667222
Content provided by The Book was Better than the Movie. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Book was Better than the Movie or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Step into the opulent world of 1870s New York high society that Martin Scorsese brought to breathtaking cinematic life, starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Winona Ryder in one of Hollywood's most acclaimed period dramas. Experience Edith Wharton's Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece through our luxurious audiobook that delivers every nuance of forbidden passion, social intrigue, and heart-wrenching sacrifice that made this novel irresistible to filmmakers.

Discover the complete story behind Scorsese's visually stunning adaptation—a tale of dangerous attraction and suffocating social conventions that reads like a Victorian-era "Dangerous Liaisons." Wharton's original novel contains layers of psychological complexity, subtle eroticism, and razor-sharp social commentary that even the most sophisticated Hollywood productions could only hint at through lingering glances and unspoken desires.

The film captures the sumptuous ballrooms and elaborate dinner parties, but only Wharton's prose reveals the full intensity of Newland Archer's internal torment as he's torn between duty to his innocent fiancée May and his consuming desire for the mysterious Countess Ellen Olenska. Experience the complete emotional devastation that Daniel Day-Lewis portrayed so powerfully, with every suppressed longing and moral struggle laid bare through Wharton's exquisite psychological insight.

From the glittering opera boxes of old New York to the hidden tensions behind parlor room conversations, this is a story of passion constrained by society's unforgiving rules—the kind of dramatic tension that Hollywood loves but that only literature can fully explore. Witness the elaborate social chess game where a single misstep could destroy reputations, the coded language of desire, and the tragic beauty of love that cannot be fulfilled.

Whether you're captivated by period dramas like "Downton Abbey," mesmerized by Scorsese's meticulous attention to historical detail, or drawn to stories of forbidden romance and moral complexity, this audiobook offers the complete literary experience that inspired one of cinema's most elegant and heartbreaking adaptations.

Listen now to the novel that proved love stories could be as sophisticated as they are devastating, and discover why Wharton's tale of sacrifice and desire continues to mesmerize both readers and filmmakers over a century later.

  continue reading

29 episodes

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