The Party at Jack's
A Novella
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- $29.99
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- $29.99
Publisher Description
In the summer of 1937, Thomas Wolfe was in the North Carolina mountains revising a piece about a party and subsequent fire at the Park Avenue penthouse apartment of the fictional Esther and Frederick Jack. He wrote to his agent, Elizabeth Nowell, 'I think it is now a single thing, as much a single thing as anything I've ever written.' Abridged and edited versions of the story were published twice, as a novella in Scribner's Monthly (May 1939) and as part of You Can't Go Home Again (1940). Now Suzanne Stutman and John Idol have worked from manuscript sources at Harvard University to reconstruct The Party at Jack's as outlined by Wolfe before his death. Here, in its untruncated state, Wolfe's novella affords a significant glimpse of a Depression-era New York inhabited by Wall Street wheelers and dealers and the theatrical and artistic elite. Wolfe describes the Jacks and their social circle with lavish attention to mannerisms and to clothing, furnishings, and other trappings of wealth and privilege. The sharply drawn contrast between the decadence of the party-goers and the struggles of the working classes in the streets below reveals Wolfe's gifts as both a writer and a sharp social critic.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Thomas Wolfe meets Tom Wolfe at last. Remember the Park Avenue penthouse party where the hoity-toity crowd gathered in The Bonfire of the Vanities? Here we're at that same party, without Tom W.'s humor--and without a story. Instead, Thomas W. gives us a cubistic painting of the building itself, from the penthouse to the subway trains beneath that tie the building to the whole U.S. economy, with portraits of the wealthy who inhabit the place, all rendered in prose of a density peculiar to this novella among his works. Those who loved Bonfire are likely to hate Jack's because of its literary daring, with entertainment a secondary consideration. Yet it is of note as the only example in all of Wolfe that shows his mastery of an experimental form he derived from Joyce. Written and revised during 1930-1936, this work first appeared in far shorter form in Scribner's monthly and in You Can't Go Home Again. Comparison with that novel shows that the present editors, both Wolfe scholars, have gone back to the original and presented him at his most expressive.