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The Gods of Newport

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In the late nineteenth century, Newport, Rhode Island, was a cauldron of money, excess, and unapologetic greed, where reputations were made and lost in a whirlwind of parties and fancied slights. But amid the glamour of yacht races, tennis matches, and costume balls raged undeclared class warfare, scandalous doings, even madness.

In 1893, railroad mogul Sam Driver, one of the few surviving robber barons of the lawless years after the Civil War, knocks on the door of fabled Newport with his daughter, Jenny, determined not to be turned away. In the past, his "new money" was tainted by his rapacious reputation, and even now, an enemy with a pedigree of wealth and position vows to slam every door in Sam's face. But he is determined to win a place in the strange rarefied world of Newport's brief summer season, presided over by social gadflies Ward McAllister and the androgynous Harry Lehr, both of whom will assist the Drivers...for a price.

The Gods of Newport brings this gilded age of excess to thrilling life. It was a time and place whose extremes of greed, conspicuous consumption, and social striving have an astonishing resonance and relevance for the America we see around us today.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 2, 2006
      True love confronts Gilded Age class hierarchy in Jakes's latest engaging historical potboiler. Railroad tycoon Sam Driver sets out to conquer the summer resort of Newport, R.I., at the 1890s pinnacle of its glamour—and snootiness—in order to avenge its snubbing of his dead wife and find a prestigious match for his daughter, Jenny. It's a world ruled by New York socialites, where the slightest blemish of background or breach of protocol triggers ostracism. Sam struggles to conform while fending off the efforts of an old rival to exclude him, but Jenny throws a monkey wrench into things by falling in love with a handsome, lower-class Irishman. Jakes serves up a melodrama—and satire—of the tyranny of social convention with a girl-power ending. It doesn't always ring true, especially when Sam pressures Jenny to marry the obviously villainous Count Orlov, and action set pieces like a tennis match and a carriage race are less than gripping. But Jakes is a fluent storyteller, and his meticulous reconstruction of fin-de-siècle excess will have fans savoring the lavish details of jewelry, fashion, food and follies.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Jakes's bestseller features Sam Driver, a robber baron and railroad tycoon who wants to be accepted by Newport society. Through a series of flashbacks the listener observes Driver claw his way to riches while competing with Gould, Vanderbilt, and the like, and marrying a dancer whose lack of social standing causes him to be ostracized by the very people from whom he seeks approval. Now he wants his daughter to be accepted into society and to find the perfect husband within it. Jack Garrett performs with cultured enunciation and enthusiasm. He becomes Driver in his quest for acceptance. His pure delivery and sharp accents provide an engaging glimpse at the Gilded Age. M.B.K. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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