Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Mrs. Astor's New York
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

About the Author

Eric Homberger is reader in English and American Studies at the University of East Anglia.

Reviews

"A richly detailed account of the vicissitudes of high society in nineteenth-century New York... fascinating." Philip Horne, Daily Telegraph; "A riveting history of New York society... artfully written, with a sly, enlivening sense of humour... Eric Homberger is learned, but judicious with the rich primary sources he has used." Andrew Rosenheim, Times Literary Supplement; "a serious and valuable social history" Brian Masters, Spectator; "A rollicking, illuminating book." Clive Aslet, Country Life; "An immensely interesting tale, and Homberger tells it well." Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post Book World; "In his elegant and extensive account Eric Homberger... recounts the details of real estate transactions, fancydress balls, upwardly mobile marriages, and exlusive enclaves... incorporating delightful bits of cultural information along the way." Marjorie Garber, Boston Sunday Globe; "Homberger's narrative has the verve and resonance of a novel by Edith Wharton." Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)"

"A richly detailed account of the vicissitudes of high society in nineteenth-century New York... fascinating." Philip Horne, Daily Telegraph; "A riveting history of New York society... artfully written, with a sly, enlivening sense of humour... Eric Homberger is learned, but judicious with the rich primary sources he has used." Andrew Rosenheim, Times Literary Supplement; "a serious and valuable social history" Brian Masters, Spectator; "A rollicking, illuminating book." Clive Aslet, Country Life; "An immensely interesting tale, and Homberger tells it well." Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post Book World; "In his elegant and extensive account Eric Homberger... recounts the details of real estate transactions, fancydress balls, upwardly mobile marriages, and exlusive enclaves... incorporating delightful bits of cultural information along the way." Marjorie Garber, Boston Sunday Globe; "Homberger's narrative has the verve and resonance of a novel by Edith Wharton." Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)"

New York scholar Homberger (Scenes from the Life of a City: Corruption and Conscience in Old New York) gathers a dog's breakfast of research into his latest exploration of the Big Apple. The result is an intriguing and curious volume that can't seem to decide whether it's a coffee table book or a study of the psychology of late 19th- and early 20th- century American aristocrats. The idea of an aristocracy emerging from a fervently democratic society is oxymoronic, as Homberger points out, but for over half a century New York's upper class was peculiarly concerned with such a hierarchy. Ward McAllister's "Patriarchs," considered to be the elite of New York society, and Mrs. Astor's list of "Four Hundred" were the bread and butter of this era's snobbery; the latter half of Homberger's book delves into McAllister's and Astor's lives, chronicling their cotillions, lunches, amusements and affairs with considerable relish. The slightly whimsical last chapter, "Being Mrs. Astor," which begins with a description of that lady's last years (spent planning parties that her doctors had instructed her servants not to hold, and making purchases merchants knew not to send to her house), may be the best part of Homberger's book. His skill for bringing to life characters of a century ago saves the book from the occasionally tedious specificity of earlier chapters, which seem to have gotten bogged down by admittedly impressive research in newspapers and other contemporary records. Illus. (Nov.) Copyright 2003 Cahners Business Information.

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top