Entertainment
Jun 05, 2026
Lost Edith Wharton Story Published After Century-Long Obscurity
A previously unpublished short story by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Edith Wharton has been discov…
A Lost Literary Treasure EmergesA never-before-published short story by Edith Wharton, the first female Pulitzer prize winner who encapsulated the so-called gilded age of US society in bestselling novels including The Age of Innocence, has received its first public airing more than a century after it was written.The Discovery of "The Men Who Saved the World"The story, discovered in the author's archives at Yale University, appears in The Strand, a quarterly magazine that has previously turned up lost or previously unknown works by literary luminaries such as Raymond Chandler, Graham Greene and Tennessee Williams. Believed to have been written no earlier than July 1918, the story was found "incomplete and unpublished" in the Edith Wharton Collection at Yale's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.A Tale of Contrasting RealitiesSet during a dinner party in a French chateau towards the end of the first world war, the story tells of the country's wealthiest residents attempting to move on from the conflict that recently scarred them, even as guns are heard still booming and soldiers dying only miles away. The tale is punctuated by the meal being served on a grand dining room table that was used as an operating table for amputations only months before when the chateau was used as a field hospital.Wharton's War Experience Reflected in FictionA main character is a young American nurse called Milly Arden, who observes the household's easy return to its privileged prewar days as she wrestles with the horrors of war and the injuries she has seen and treated. Arden's character appears to be at least in part autobiographical: Wharton, who died in 1937 aged 75, had extensive experience of field hospitals during the conflict also known as the Great War, and helped set up medical care and facilities for affected women and children.Modern Parallels in a Century-Old NarrativeAndrew Gulli, editor-in-chief of The Strand, said the story from more than a century ago has parallels in global events of today. "We live in a time where we're very far away from a lot of horrific events that are happening around the world, and this story sort of encapsulates that mood where there's this beautiful chateau, and people are trying to go back to the old prewar era with the chandeliers and this wonderful dancing, and a dinner party, and not far away the war's still happening," he said.Scholarly Significance and Future DiscoveriesProfessor Isabelle Parsons, a British Open University professor and Wharton scholar who first uncovered the manuscripts, noted that "in the past decade, news of fresh archival discoveries has frequently thrilled Wharton's casual and critical readers." She described the story as "casting a satirical eye over the volunteer efforts of privileged women" and "reads like an experimental attempt – ultimately abandoned by Wharton – at confronting the traumatic effects of warfare through its explicit references to amputation as medical care at the front."
#Edith Wharton
#The Strand
#Yale University
Read More