The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields – Book Giveaway, Review & Author Q&A

Book Review:

The Age of Desire

The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields is one heck of a shocking tale for this Edith Wharton fan!

I’ve always loved reading about the literary life during the Gilded Age in Paris, and I was pleased with Jennie Fields portrayal of Edith Wharton during this time period. I enjoyed learning more about some of Wharton’s more famous friends, such as Henry James, but I was shocked to find out about her terrible marriage to Teddy Wharton. Teddy lived a life of leisure, made all the more dangerous because he suffered from Bipolar Disorder, and they were often apart, as they were stuck in a loveless marriage until their eventual divorce.

The book is told from the point of view by Edith and her longtime secretary (and former governess), Anna Bahlmann. They had a lifelong relationship, which was tested by an affair Edith had when she was 45 years-old with William Morton Fullerton, a much-younger younger man and journalist. As Edith becomes obsessed with Fullerton, and her marriage grinds to a halt, Anna and Edith grow apart, and Anna finds adventures of her own, while both women struggle to keep the fragility of their friendship intact.

What you need to know about this book is that while Edith Wharton was a literary genius, and a rich and famous woman, she also had a tragic secret–she never had experienced pleasure in bed, never knew what an orgasm was, and never really had sex with her husband. Poor Edith! Reading about her affair was very hard for me, since I have been a fan of her work for so long now, and I didn’t want to know just how miserable her life really was. However, you may love a book filled with literary scandal and sex, so this might just be the perfect book for you. I’ll leave you with this quote from the book.

“The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning. But the heart of fools is in the house of mirth.”

Edith Wharton

Morton Fullerton

AUTHOR Q&A:

The relationship between Edith and Anna is very complex. Did you always plan on making their troubled friendship central to the book, or did it grow out of your research?

It wasn’t until three months into the writing of the book that I decided to add a secondary protagonist, someone who could view Edith objectively.  Anna Bahlmann seemed the perfect character as she was with Edith on and off since her days as Edith’s governess until the year Anna died in 1916.  To have kept Anna with her so long, I assumed they must be very close, but biographers had hardly mentioned her.

Then after I’d already written many chapters of the book, a miracle occurred.  Over 100 letters from Edith to Anna which had been moldering in an attic came up for auction at Christies! Everything I supposed about their relationship was true. They were loving and close since Edith’s childhood, and she trusted Anna with a great deal.  I grew more and more intrigued with this shadowy figure.

Questions began to arise.  Why, for instance, during the summer after the onset of Edith’s affair with Morton Fullerton, was Anna suddenly sent to Europe on a trip that was considered a gift from Edith?   Earlier, in letters to other people, it was clear Edith was upset and even annoyed when Anna wasn’t around to help her, so why was it arranged for them to be suddenly so much apart? Though I have no hard evidence that Anna was disturbed by Edith’s relationship with Fullerton, many events suggested she’d been sent away. I wanted Anna to be the book’s conscience.  If Edith was unhappy, disturbed by her splintering relationship to Morton, it made sense she’d send Anna off on a trip.

Another intriguing coincidence is that I had created a warm alliance between Anna and Teddy.  After I’d written most of the book, I found letters from Edith to others that said that Anna was a calming influence over Teddy on his worst days, the only one patient enough to sit with him, that he was asking for her—exactly as I had written it.

Anna supports Edith’s writing as a typist, early reader, and—in a way—editor. Did Edith ever include Anna in her Acknowledgements? How did Anna’s involvement in Edith’s work complicate their relationship?

Though she never acknowledged Anna publicly as far as I know, in letters directly to Anna, she thanked her.  In fact, in one letter early in Edith’s writing career, she sent Anna the check she received for a story saying, “The story is so associated in my mind with the hours that we spent in writing it out together, & I owe its opportune presentment &speedy acceptance largely to the fact that you were here to get it written out at a time when I could not have done so, that I have a peculiar feeling about your having just this special cheque & no other as a souvenir of our work together.”

In her published biography, A Backward Glance, she spoke warmly about her relationship to Anna when she was a child “my beloved German teacher, who saw which way my fancy turned, and fed it with all the wealth of German literature, from the Minnesingers to Heine.”

But in a later autobiographical fragment that was never published she said, “My good little governess was cultivated & conscientious, but she never struck a spark from me, she never threw a new light on any subject, or made me see the relation of things to each other.  My childhood & youth were an intellectual desert.”

If she is referring to Anna in this sentence, (I hope she is not) it saddens me a great deal.  In any case, I believe Edith saw Anna as something of a servant.  She certainly did straddle Edith’s world and the world of the household staff, as beloved and essential as she seemed to be.  At the same time, Edith generously took Anna on foreign trips, out to dinner and to the theatre with her.  Without Edith, her life might well have been merely that of a teacher.

As I have written Anna, she sees her place in life as a helpmate and accepts that Edith is the chosen one.  She is proud of her association with Edith and content with her place in life.

Edith Wharton is one of your favorite writers. How did that influence your writing?

Well, I must say, I felt very conscious of the language I used. I wanted it to be appropriate to the era, hard-working and beautiful all at once.  I could never dream of writing as exquisitely as Edith.  I often get chills when I read her writing.  If angels could write, they’d write as she did. The music of her language is instructive and breathtaking.  But I tried to write in a way that I felt might please her.  Also, I often started my writing sessions by reading a few pages of one of her books.  I never get tired of her books, no matter how often I read them.

The book follows Edith’s sexual awakening. What was it like writing sex scenes for such a well-known writer?

Not many people know this, but when Edith died, among her effects, her literary executor found some pornography that she’d penned. There was nothing shy about this work. It was bold, shocking, and also, of course, exquisitely written.  While I did not use any of the language of this piece (named Beatrice Palmato, for those who are curious—and yes, it’s on the internet) it did instruct me as to how she viewed sex and passion, and gave me insight into what excited her.

Paris figures heavily into the book. What did the city mean to Edith? What’s your relationship to Paris and did it figure into the writing of the book?

Edith adored Paris.  It was everything that New York wasn’t: culturally oriented, worldly, beautiful.  She found New York society closed and stifling.  She blossomed when she finally moved to France full-time, and her devotion to France is clear in how she helped the women of France during World War I with her workrooms and charities. (France awarded her the Cross of the Legion of Honor for her work during the war.) She had loved Paris as a child, and even more as an adult.  And of course, she fell in love with Morton while in Paris. That would forever insure a place for Paris in her heart.

There was a period where I did not like Paris.  I found it jostling and sad.  But about the time I began the book; I also began a new relationship to Paris, and fell in love with it all over again.

By the end of the book, Edith’s husband Teddy is not a very sympathetic character. Did you know much about Teddy when you began this project? Did you find yourself taking sides?

I knew nothing of Teddy when I took on the project, but it wasn’t long before I discovered that he suffered in later life from Manic Depression at a time when people didn’t know what to make of that or how to treat it.  Truthfully, I see Teddy as a very sympathetic character who married a woman unsuited to him, and then, distraught, fell victim to mental illness (which seemed to run in his family.)  If Teddy could have spent his later years at the Mount with his pigs and horses, he might have been a much happier man.  Edith was an intellectual.  Teddy was anything but.  Yet, he adored Edith.  And for a longtime, he was a kind and patient husband to her. Thinking of Teddy’s life saddens me.

You were an advertising creative director before becoming a novelist. Both are creative, but in different ways. How did your past career help in your current one?

My advertising career has affected my fiction writing in myriad ways.  For one thing, I am always conscious of trying to tell a story in the least words possible.  After years of cramming twenty thoughts into thirty seconds, one gets pretty good at writing minimally!  Advertising also taught me to be disciplined, to work well under strict deadlines, and to work every day.  What I loved in advertising also interests me in my fiction:  to solve puzzles.  The tighter the strictures of the assignment, the more intrigued I am. I love being creative in a small box. This came into play with this book.  I had to tell a story that already existed but I had to shape it into a book.  It was a Rubik’s Cube.  The elements were all there, but they needed to be twisted into the right order to create a satisfying pattern.  Also, I was forced to read between the lines.  Edith kept such clear diaries; her life was mapped out almost daily.  But what really happened at the theatre that night?  Why did Anna leave at that time for New York?  Why did Morton act the way he did?  It was a delicious puzzle and I very much enjoyed solving it to my satisfaction.  I hope I’ve done Edith’s life justice.

What’s your writing regimen?

Generally, I walk in the mornings and do errands.  I write in the afternoons.  Usually I read starting at 1 or 2 pm.  (While I was working on THE AGE OF DESIRE I always read something by Edith). Then, with a strong cup of tea I get down to work by three.  I write in my writing room, a large old sleeping porch with windows on three sides overlooking my backyard.  I sit in a comfortable chair with an ottoman, my MacBook Pro on my lap. I rarely write more than three hours at a time, usually less.  But it’s extraordinary what three dedicated hours can generate as far as pages.  If I get five good pages a day, I’m thrilled. But not every day can be a successful day.  I always take weekends off—perhaps a holdover from my years in advertising.  My brain needs time to recharge!

What’s next for you?

I am writing a book about a woman caught up in the radical anti-war movement of the1960s.  She is a woman in her late thirties who married young and had no youth. She goes back to college, and gets drawn into the Weather Underground.  I’ve always been intrigued with how people who were advocates of anti-violence could justify their increasingly violent activities.

Jennie Fields

About the Author:

Jennie Fields received an MFA in creative writing from the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop and is the author of three other novels, Lily Beach, Crossing Brooklyn Ferry and The Middle Ages.  An Illinois native, she spent many years as an advertising creative director in New York and currently lives with her husband in Nashville, Tennessee.

To purchase your copy a The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields, visit Amazon.com.

To find out more about the author and her other books, visit her website, JennieFields.com.

To follow @JFieldsAuthor on Twitter, visit Twitter.com.

To like Jennie Fields on Facebook, visit Facebook.com.

BOOK GIVEAWAY:

Win 1 of 2 copies of The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields

RULES:

**Open to U.S. residents.

**No P.O. boxes, please.

**Do the mandatory entry. If you win this giveaway, you must respond to my email within 24 hours in order to claim your prize.

**All comments must be separate to count as separate entries. For example, if you follow me on Facebook and Twitter, leave 2 separate comments, one with your Facebook name, and one with your Twitter name. Or, if you posted about the giveaway on your blog, leave 5 numbered comments, all with a link to your giveaway.

**Please read the additional rules here.

HOW TO ENTER:

**Mandatory Entry: Go to the author’s website JennieFields.com, and tell me what fun or fascinating thing you noticed there.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Like my The Girl from the Ghetto page on Facebook. Make sure to leave your Facebook name in your comment.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Add me as a friend (GirlFrom TheGhetto) on Facebook. Make sure to leave your Facebook name in your comment.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Share a link on your Facebook wall with the following comment: Join me & enter The Girl from the Ghetto’s book giveaway for The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields here http://tinyurl.com/c4u86qr. Make sure to leave a comment with a link to your Facebook profile message.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Follow me @NerdGirlBlogger on Twitter. Make sure to leave your @Twitter name in your comment.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Follow me on Twitter and tweet the following: RT @NerdGirlBlogger – Enter to #win The Age of Desire by @JFieldsAuthor Edith Wharton #book #giveaway http://tinyurl.com/c4u86qr. You can tweet 6x a day (Once every 4 hours) for even more chances to win. Make sure to leave a link to your tweet in a comment below.

+1 MORE ENTRY: Subscribe to my blog via email or Feedburner.

+1 MORE ENTRY: Follow me on Pinterest.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Add me to your circle on Google +.

+1 MORE ENTRY: Follow me on StumbleUpon. Make sure to leave me your name.

+1 MORE ENTRY: Rank me on Klout by giving me a K+ in Contests, Giveaways, Books, or another topic of your choice.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Subscribe to my YouTube Channel.

+1  MORE ENTRY: Follow me on Goodreads.

+1 MORE ENTRY: Add The Age of Desire to your to-read shelf on Goodreads.

+1 MORE ENTRY: Comment here and tell me why you need to win this giveaway. Do you enjoy reading and need a new book to get you through the summer? Do you love Edith Wharton, historical fiction in general, or books with a steamy plot? Or, do you just love winning free stuff?

+5 MORE ENTRIES: Write about this giveaway on your own blog. Make sure to post a link to http://thegirlfromtheghetto.wordpress.com, and leave me 5 separate copies of your link via comment here.

Contest ends Friday, August 10, 2012 at 10 p.m.

Disclosure: While I was not paid for this post,  I received an ARC of the same book, in exchange for my honest review.

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104 Responses to The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields – Book Giveaway, Review & Author Q&A

  1. I adore the antiquated look of her website…It really displays her
    style and this book! Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  2. I “Like” you on Facebook…
    Again, thanks much!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  3. We are friends on Facebook.
    Merci, Cindi
    Cindi Hoppes
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  4. I follow you on Pinterest.
    Many thanks to you!
    Cindi
    Cindi Hoppes
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  5. I follow you on Good Reads…
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  6. It wasn’t too long ago that I read articles about the selling
    of Edith Wharton’s home. They wanted to make it a museum
    and there was a bit of controversy. This is what initially interested
    me about Edith Wharton. Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmkail[dot]com

  7. Jennie Fields has written 4 books, and Edith Wharton has read 50 books.

  8. We are friends on Facebook -Michelle Jones

  9. I like The Girl from the Ghetto on Facebook – Michelle Jones

  10. I want to win this book because i like steamy sex in my books. Whoo-hoo!!!

  11. I liked your Girl from the Ghetto Facebook page.

  12. We’re already Facebook friends (Deborah Rosen).

  13. I was delighted to see a copy of Edith Warton’s “automobile permit.” I wouldn’t have guessed they were giving them to women in those days.

  14. “Facebook Post!”
    https://www.facebook.com/cindi512/posts/415115591859105.
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  15. I follow you on Twitter!
    Thanks much…Cindi
    cmh512
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  16. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  17. Also, I am an email subscriber to your blog.
    Merci bien!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  18. I follow you on Google+.
    Thank you, Cindi
    Cindi Hoppes
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  19. I also follow you on StumbleUpon!
    Thanks, Cindi
    windycindy
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  20. I gave you Klout in contests.
    Many thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  21. I am a subscriber to your YouTube Channel.
    Again, thanks so much!
    Cindi
    cmh532
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  22. I saw that she has a book tour starting soon.

  23. We are friends on Facebook.

    Joy Fields

  24. I subscribe to your blog via email.

  25. I follow you on Goodreads.

    Joy Fields

  26. I want to win this book because you made it sound so good!

  27. Love the website; there is a lot of background info and photos which is nice.

    Joan

  28. I “liked” your page on Facebook!

    Joan Miller Riggs

  29. I added you as a friend on Facebook.

    Joan Miller Riggs

  30. I am lnow following you on Pinterest.

    aka RaisingAlexis

  31. I need this book because I love historical fiction, especially with strong female protagonists!!!!!!!!!

  32. I already follow you on Goodreads.!

    Joan Miller

  33. “Daily Tweet!” # https2twitter.com/cmh512/status/231870863136403457…
    Much thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]htomail[dot]com

  34. Hi -enjoyed reading about this new book , especially the author interview. I can’t enter the contest as I’m from the UK but I was interested in the post regardless. Following from Bookblogs. This book is one for my list. Thanks.
    http://lowfellwritersplace.blogspot.co.uk/

  35. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  36. “Daily Tweet!” #2

    .
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmai{dot]com

  37. “Daily Tweet!” #3

    .
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  38. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Many thanks to you!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  39. “Daily Tweet!” #2

    .
    Again, many thanks!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  40. “Daily Tweet!” #3

    .
    Many thanks to you! Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  41. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Much thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  42. I found no tour dates for NC.

  43. follow on Goodreads

  44. Added The Age of Desire by Jennie Fields to my TBR list

  45. I need to win so I’ll have something new to read. Plus every book I win I pass on to my local library, it flooded last year & need all the books it can get.

  46. “Daily Tweet!” #2

    .
    Merci, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  47. “Daily Tweet!” #3


    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  48. “Daily Tweet!”

    .
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  49. One of the things I found fascinating about Jennie Fields is that she received her MFA at a writing workshop at the University of Iowa. I am an Iowa native and that makes me proud to know that bit of info. The other was to see Edith Wharton’s drivers permit as I was not aware that women were aloud to have those in that time era.

  50. I follow you on twitter my twitter name is @Tink1113. I also follow on Face book and we are friends my FB name is Tammy Hall.

  51. I follow you on GoodReads and on Pinterest. The reason I feel like I need this book is because I love historical fiction it is one of my absolute favorite reading genres! I enjoyed the interview and reading and learning more about The Age of Desire. I would absolutely love to win this book!

  52. “Daily Tweet!” #2


    Merci bien! Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  53. I learned about her book tour – hope to see her!

  54. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Thank you, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  55. I like her house is being sold.

  56. I like you on Facebook.

  57. I’m you friend on Facebook.

  58. I follow you on Twitter.

  59. I follow you on Pinterest.

  60. I gave you Klout in writing.

  61. I subscribe to your YouTube.

  62. I follow you on Goodreads.

  63. I added it to my shelf.

  64. “Daily Tweet!” #2


    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  65. I would love to win this giveaway! I am a book obsessed nerd and this one looks really good. I visited the site and found the blog very interesting. I like that we can get a glimpse into her life, get book updates, and see where she is doing signings.

  66. “Daily Tweet!” #3


    Again, thanks very much!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  67. I found out about her book tour

  68. Jennie Fields received an MFA in creative writing from the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop and is the author of three other novels, Lily Beach, Crossing Brooklyn Ferry and The Middle Ages.

  69. we’re friends on facebook, i am tony l smoaks

  70. twitter follower @fdp4life

  71. pinterest follower susansmoaks

  72. google + follower susansmoaks

  73. I checked her book tours and nothing for North Carolina.

  74. The Q and A with Jennie was fun.

  75. I like The Girl from the Ghetto Page on Facebook.

  76. I added you as a friend on Facebook.

  77. I need to win this giveaway . i love books with steamy plots and interesting characters.

  78. I forgot to leave my Facebook name…Buddy Garrett

  79. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Thanks to you…Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  80. I found out more about the Wharton connection, and also her book tour! hope to see her

  81. I learned that she is from Illinios and spent many years as an advertising creative director in New York.

  82. I like the girl from the ghetto facebook page.

  83. I added nerd girl blogger as a friend on goodreads!

  84. I added the book to my to-read list on goodreads.

  85. I sent a friend request to nerd girl blogger on facebook.

  86. “Daily Tweet!” #2


    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  87. I learned that Jennie is going on tour through September but I’m sad that she’s not coming to Chicago!

  88. I’d love to win because I don’t know much about Edith Wharton but I love historical fiction and especially a good love story!

  89. I’m your friend on Facebook – my FB name is Amanda Moore

  90. I added The Age of Desire to my to-read bookshelf on Goodreads. My name is Amber.

  91. I’m already friends with you on Goodreads – my name is Amber.

  92. I subscribe to your YouTube channel – my YouTube name is Hurdler4eva

  93. I follow you on Pinterest, here’s my link: http://pinterest.com/ambergibson8/

  94. learned she’s the author of three other novels, Lily Beach, Crossing Brooklyn Ferry and The Middle Ages.

  95. “Daily Tweet!” #1


    Merci beaucoup to you!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  96. “Daily Tweet!” #2

    .
    Bunches of thanks!
    Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  97. “Daily Tweet!” #3

    .
    Thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  98. “Daily Tweet!” #1

    .
    Many thanks, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  99. “Daily Tweet!” #2

    .
    Thanks to you…Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

  100. “Daily Tweet!” #3

    .
    Merci, Cindi
    jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

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