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A satire
- The Late George Apley is a 1937 novel by John Phillips Marquand. It is a satire of Boston's upper class in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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The Late George Apley is a 1937 novel by John Phillips Marquand. It is a satire of Boston's upper class in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The title character is a Harvard University-educated WASP living on Beacon Hill in downtown Boston.
- John P. Marquand
- 1937
Feb 17, 2022 · The Late George Apley is an amusing satirical biography, but a better choice for the Pulitzer Prize in 1938 would have been Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston or Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck.
The Late George Apley is an exquisite work of satire. The framing device of the novel is that George Apley’s son has asked the narrator to write a biography of his father, a leading citizen of Boston.
- (2.3K)
- Paperback
- John P. Marquand
Marquand uses irony to convey his satire and point of view. In The Late George Apley the letters of the protagonist, undercut by the comments of the even more conservative editor, combine with...
The Late George Apley is a 1937 novel by John P. Marquand. It is a satire of the insular, stultifying lifestyle of the upper class WASP Apley family of Boston. At the start of the novel George Apley (1866-1933) has recently died.
The Late George Apley is a 1937 novel by John Phillips Marquand. It is a satire of Boston's upper class in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The title character is a Harvard-educated WASP living on Beacon Hill in downtown Boston.
The novel is written in the form of a memoir supposedly by a friend of the main character, George Apley, and based on letters written to and by Mr. Apley throughout his life (1866-1933). It is described as a satire on upperclass Boston life in those years but I think also provides an interesting description of that era and the changes that took ...