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After a couple of meh books, I grabbed a never-read Edith Wharton off the shelf - "The Buccaneers." She is probably my favorite author and rarely lets me down. "House of Mirth," "Summer," "Ethan Frome" and "The Age of Innocents" are some of her best that I can read time and again. However, some are just good and, so far (50 pages in), "The Buccaneers" is just good.
Just finished Wharton's "The Buccaneers" (which was actually finished by another author as she passed away while writing it - hence, it's not a full Wharton novel) which is a solid novel but doesn't break any fresh ground for Wharton although she seems to have had fun poking fun at the turn-of-the-Century pattern of wealthy American heiresses marrying impoverished English peerage (think, oh, say, "Downton Abbey").
Basically, that's the theme - several wealthy and one not-so-wealthy (but all new money) single American women - shunned as "new" money by established American society - travel to England looking for social acceptance and husbands amidst the financially struggling English upper classes. As always, Wharton excels at drawing full characters that you care about - with their flaws and all - and mixing in some good plot twists, but the book feels a bit tired as she's done all this before and better as in "The House of Mirth."
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