Synopsis
Oscar
Wilde brings his enormous gifts for astute social observation
and sparkling prose to The Picture of Dorian Gray,
his dreamlike story of a young man who sells his soul
for eternal youth and beauty. This dandy, who remains
forever unchanged—petulant, hedonistic, vain, and
amoral—while a painting of him ages and grows increasingly
hideous with the years, has been horrifying, enchanting,
obsessing, even corrupting readers for more than a hundred
years.
Taking
the reader in and out of London drawing rooms, to the
heights of aestheticism, and to the depths of decadence,
The Picture of Dorian Gray is not only a melodrama about
moral corruption. Laced with bon mots and vivid depictions
of upper-class refinement, it is also a fascinating look
at the milieu of Wilde’s fin-de-siècle world
and a manifesto of the creed “Art for Art’s
Sake.”
The
ever-quotable Wilde, who once delighted London with his
scintillating plays, scandalized readers with this, his
only novel. Upon publication, Dorian was condemned as
dangerous, poisonous, stupid, vulgar, and immoral, and
Wilde as a “driveling pedant.” The novel,
in fact, was used against Wilde at his much-publicized
trials for “gross indecency,” which led to
his imprisonment and exile on the European continent.
Even so, The Picture of Dorian Gray firmly established
Wilde as one of the great voices of the Aesthetic movement,
and endures as a classic that is as timeless as its hero.