Nan and Virginia St. George have the great good luck to be born
beautiful and wealthy - the two qualities prized above all others in
1870s New York - but the insurmountably bad luck to come from "new
money." Shunned by the snobbish guardians of Manhattan society, the
lively girls still attract many admirers, but no offers of marriage from
eligible men - the grail pursued discreetly but with single-minded
intensity by all young women of polite birth (and their mothers). Their
spirited governess, Laura Testvalley, determines to launch these
buccaneers in London society, whose impoverished aristocracy, groaning
under the burdens of massive country estates, are only too willing to
trade a title for a fortune. But the earls and lords have failed to
reckon with the strong wills of the buccaneers - especially exquisite
Nan's. She dares to hope for more than position and wealth: a genuine,
enduring love is what she craves, and she's willing to sacrifice
everything she's attained for something true and real. Edith Wharton's
novel pits tradition against vitality and change in a lushly romantic
tale, observed with all her characteristic elegance and wit.