What Do I Read Next?
Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, published first in 1877, centers around a sophisticated woman and her demise as she pursues her true love despite the price to her family. She defies high society with her rebellious behavior and mentally disintegrates as a result, ultimately ending her own life.
Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth, published in 1905, relates the tale of a woman and her descent down the social ladder. Fate and inevitability are both themes of this acclaimed classic story.
Ten North Frederick is O’Hara’s award-winning 1955 novel detailing the life and death of another of Gibbsville’s prominent citizens, Joseph Benjamin Chapin. Trapped by societal constraints, Joe’s life is marked by a series of unfulfilled desires and regret.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender Is the Night (1934) relates the story of the dissolution of a man’s marriage and his entire life. Set against a jetsetter Depression-era backdrop, the tale of Dick Diver’s destruction shares many common traits with O’Hara’s work; in fact, O’Hara heartily endorsed this book as one of his favorites of Fitzgerald’s.
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