Perhaps more than any other American novelist of the modern age, Edith
Wharton devoted herself whole-heartedly to the task of capturing the
colour and tone of her age in her novels. The art of novel writing was a
sacred task for her.> Like her great predecessor Henry James, she
believed that the novel was no longer a matter of It was a serious
affair which consistent labour on the part of the novelist. She believed
that the novelist's task required utmost honesty, sincerity The and
seriousness of purpose. The present study confirms Edith Wharton's
greatness as a serious novelist who has presented the peculiar and
particular nature of social change in her novels. Society seemed to be
going through a process of reconstruction and she knew that the process
was disquieting. She was not only interested in social change or the
social reality of the period but was also deeply concerned with the
change inside the individual and his family. When she started writing,
she found that in her age as a clash between the old leisured classes
and the neo-rich, between the old values and the new ones which were
process of acquiring a distinct shape.