Skip to main content
Ornament and Silence: Essays on Women's Lives From Edith Wharton to Germaine Greer

Ornament and Silence: Essays on Women's Lives From Edith Wharton to Germaine Greer

Current price: $19.00
Publication Date: April 28th, 1998
Publisher:
Vintage
ISBN:
9780375701122
Pages:
268
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

From one of The New Yorker’s most revered writers comes “a brilliant collection” (The New York Times Book Review) about women in love affairs, friendships, marriages, and families—from Virginia Woolf and Flaubert’s mistress to Russian novelist Nina Berberova and English naturalist Miriam Rothschild.  

In these fourteen essays, Fraser focuses on women in love affairs, friendships, marriages, and families; in relation to one another and to the talented men who so often rendered them invisible. In Ornament and Silence we see Virginia Woolf, haunted and eventually destroyed by the sexual secrets of her childhood. We meet Flaubert's theatrically importunate mistress, Louise Colet, the one woman who could briefly slip past the master's misogyny. Fraser offers vibrant portraits of the Russian novelist Nina Berberova and the English naturalist Miriam Rothschild. And here is Fraser herself, learning her craft at The New Yorker, tending her English garden and—on every page—delighting us with the manifold felicities of her prose.

Praise for Ornament and Silence: Essays on Women's Lives From Edith Wharton to Germaine Greer

"A brilliant collection...Ms. Fraser does the greatest honor a writer can do people: she brings them alive." —The New York Times Book Review

"A wonderfully idiosyncratic set of essays on women famous and unknown whose public and private lives Fraser examines with great feeling and exactitude...insight, intelligence, and grace." —Newsday

"Subtlety, fluency, candor, an agile sensate intellect—Kennedy Fraser brings all these gifts to bear on a subject that is not always contemplated so untendentiously, with such independence of mind, and from such a generous and worldly point of view." —Phillip Roth

"One of my most reread books.... I keep rereading the book to try to divine her formula, but it still feels like magic to me." —Rachel Syme, The New Yorker