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The New Yorkers (1st Weidenfeld & Nicolson ed.)

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A sprawling, multicharacter masterpiece of guilt and the hope for redemption

Opening in 1943 and spanning over a decade, The New Yorkers is Hortense Calisher's most ambitious novel. Judge Simon Mannix, a well-educated upper-middle-class New Yorker, is faced with a terrible decision when his unfaithful wife is accidentally shot and killed by their twelve-year-old daughter. Mannix insists upon keeping the truth a secret, claiming that the death was a suicide, as he attempts to save his child from a life of psychological trauma. Shame accumulates in his consciousness, and Mannix finds himself obsessed with the nuances of guilt.

Calisher weaves a complex tapestry of closely observed human behaviors and emotions, accentuated by a collection of fragmented portraits of the lives that intersect with those of the judge and his daughter.  

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Product Details
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
1480438944 / 9781480438941
eBook (EPUB)
813.54
17/09/2013
English
559 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Reprint. Derived record based on unviewed print version record. Originally published: Boston : Little, Brown & Co., 1966.