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Determined to secure entry into the elite social circles of late nineteenth-century Rhode Island, Sam Driver enlists the help of a pair of social gadflies but finds his efforts complicated by his daughter's romance with an impoverished young Irishman.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Social life and customs, Historical fiction, Fiction, Upper class, United States, Large type books, Fiction, historical, general, Rhode island, fiction, Greed, Fathers and daughters, Classes supérieures, Romans, nouvelles, Mœurs et coutumes, Livres en gros caractères, Large print books, Manners and customsPlaces
Newport (R.I.), United StatesTimes
19th centuryEdition | Availability |
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The Gods of Newport
2008, Penguin Group USA, Inc.
Electronic resource
in English
0786588055 9780786588053
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The Gods of Newport
October 2, 2007, Signet
Paperback
in English
- Reprint edition
0451222342 9780451222343
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The Gods of Newport
November 8, 2006, Wheeler Publishing
Hardcover
in English
- Lrg edition
1597223298 9781597223294
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Book Details
Edition Notes
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Promise ItemInternet Archive item record
Better World Books record
amazon.com record
Promise Item
Work Description
John Jakes, "the godfather of the historical novel" (Los Angeles Times), leaves the South to travel north for an epic tale of scandalous doings in one of the world's most famous resorts.
In the late nineteenth century, Newport, Rhode Island, was a cauldron of undeclared class warfare where reputations were made and lost in a whirlwind of parties and fancied slights. Where giant marble mansions called "cottages" arose and where—amid the glamour of yacht races, tennis matches, and costume balls—depression, even madness, sometimes followed social failure.
In 1893, Sam Driver, railroad mogul and one of the few surviving robber barons of the lawless years after the Civil War, knocks on the door of fabled Newport together with his daughter, Jenny, determined not to be turned away a second time.The first time, his new money was tainted by his rapacious reputation and his dealings with some of the most dishonest businessmen of the era. The Drivers find that some who know Sam's past won't let it rest. One enemy with a pedigree of wealth and position vows to slam every door in Sam's face.
But Sam plunges in, determined to win a place in the strange, rarefied world of Newport's brief summer season, presided over by social gadflies Ward McAllister and the androgynous Harry Lehr, both of whom will assist the Drivers . . . for a price. Sam's daughter wants the best that Newport offers but finds herself drawn into a dangerous romance with an impoverished young Irishman.
The Gods of Newport brings this gilded age of excess to thrilling life. It was a time and place whose extremes of greed, conspicuous consumption, and social striving have an astonishing resonance and relevance for the America we see around us today.
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February 28, 2023 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
February 9, 2023 | Edited by BWBImportBot | Modified local IDs, amazon IDs, source records |
December 10, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
December 10, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
August 11, 2011 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Internet Archive item record |