The Bucaneers

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Wharton's final novel (completed by Marion Mainwaring after the author's death in 1937) revolves around American and British society in the 1870s. Told in large part through the eyes of American debutantes, the story portrays innocent, wide-eyed, almost ethereal girls who turn into socially conscious women with financial worries--unrecognizable even to themselves. The beginning sections quickly catch the listener's attention, with lush descriptions of rooms, clothes, and the heights of feminine beauty. We enter a world of intrigue: secrets, characters with past relationships that could prove fatal, and competition taken to its limits. Its literary value notwithstanding, this book might appeal to soap opera and romance fans. For more attentive listeners, it quickly becomes disconcerting as more and more characters with awkward British-sounding names are added. It's increasingly difficult to recall who's who without backing up the tape. Most libraries can pass on this one.-- Rochelle Ratner, formerly Poetry Editor, "Soho Weekly News", New York

null pages, Hardcover

First published January 1,1938

About the author

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Edith Wharton was an American writer and designer. Wharton drew upon her insider's knowledge of the upper-class New York "aristocracy" to portray, realistically, the lives and morals of the Gilded Age. In 1921, she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in Fiction, for her novel, The Age of Innocence. She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame, in 1996. Her other well-known works are The House of Mirth, the novella Ethan Frome, and several notable ghost stories.

Community Reviews

Rating(4.2 / 5.0, 109 votes)
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109 reviews All reviews
March 17,2025
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I really enjoyed reading this book and found it to be a very fast read. I was interested in it because I watched the BBC dramatization - which was heavily Americanized & modernized as it turns out. My chief exposure to Edith Wharton was the very short and quite depressing "Ethan Frome." I found that to be written in quite an impenetrable style and was turned off of her for years - until I saw the film and came across a copy of the book in a used bookstore.

The way she writes in "The Buccaneers" is really fantastic - she manages to show things from the perspectives of different characters - even going into the point of view of a particular character for an entire chapter. Sadly, she died before she finished this and another author finished off the book based on her notes.

I much prefer the book to the film because it is really of a cloth with the way Edith Wharton talks about the values and interactions of these social classes. I even found it interesting how she referenced changing clothing styles (I could hear the old ladies saying "young girls these days!! pantalettes? oh dear!").

Her character development was really fantastic - I got a very clear sense of who these people were and their motivations, how they spoke and behaved. Such a better story than what the film presented!
March 17,2025
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The last and unfinished novel, by one of our greatest female writers, Edith Wharton. It was finished by a Wharton scholar, Ms. Mainwearing, and she did an exceptional job. In this her last novel, Edith wrote about the nouveau rich in the NYC of the 1880's, and their struggle to fit in with the older, rich families. Edith Wharton belonged to one of the oldest, elite families in NYC, and she wrote about what she knew best, her own class and their prejudice and snobbery (which she detested). This book is so good, it's like eating a box of Godiva chocolates. Also made into a PBS movie, which is also worth watching.
March 17,2025
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This might be an odd start to Wharton, but the subject matter intrigued me after having read a non-fiction book about the very phenomenon Wharton talks of here (American heiresses who, finding no entrance into the very rigid New York social scene, instead invaded the British aristocracy). The Buccaneers is unfinished, but Wharton reads like a Victorian Austen, fully as knowing about human nature, and almost as ready to take the piss out of everybody though not quite. I really enjoyed it and it is a great shame it was never finished. However, there's plenty more where that came from so I have something to look forward to at least.

March 17,2025
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I couldn’t help but shake my head at the young debutantes that this novel was centered around and wonder at their choices.
March 17,2025
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This is hard to rate for me. I’m winding up at 4 stars because 3 seems a bit too harsh.

I really loved the first half or so of this. All the relationships and seeing England through the eyes of these American girls. How all the prejudices can be so different depending on the people… Once Nan got married though it’s like it screeched to a halt. I get that she’s bored and unhappy, but I don’t want to be. The end picked up and, for the most part, I think Mainwaring did a good job at finishing the book.
March 17,2025
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After reading The House of Mirth I was so depressed that I promised myself I'd never read another book by Edith Wharton, but this one turned out differently (thank god) and I couldn't put it down.

more soon but for now, it was a solidly good read.
March 17,2025
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The content of The Buccaneers could well and wholly be summed up by the French proverb "L'argent ne fait pas le bonheur." Neither do the titles of nobility and everything that goes with it.
Wharton's choice of theme for this novel is twofold. First, it shows the collision of two civilisations, where the world of the blase British nobility, considered by itself to be the pinnacle of the excellence, is invaded by the American parvenus. This would be of no importance if the American intruders weren't "filthy rich" and the Brits weren't in desperate need of money to maintain their out-of-date Ancien Regime style of living.
The second theme Wharton addresses is the social position of the married women. Being completely dependent on a husband and his (good??) will, women were seen almost as a personal property of men. Their fate was not to be envied. Their reputation could be ruined with a few well-chosen words that were admitted to and valid in the court of law. Caught in mariages de convenance, they either had to settle down for a loveless and dull life or they could break away. Freedom, however, had to be paid dearly, and so it is understandable why most women chose the former "solution".
Edith Wharton, being herself part of the high society, excells in showing the fate of the married American "buccaneers" in the British society. In the part of the novel written by her, humour, dry witticism and irony blend into a mixture so familiar from her other works. It's only too bad that the same cannot be said about the concluding part, written by M. Mainwaring!!!!!
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