• Facebook logo
    Forgot your password?
Sign Up
Sign up for Facebook to use Visual Bookshelf.
 
LivingSocial
  • Books
     
  • More 

    Other interests...

    Albums
     
    Beer
     
    Movies
     
    Restaurants
     
    Slopes
     
    TV Shows
     
    Video Games
     
    iPhone Apps
     
     
     
  • Home |
  • My Profile |
  • My Collection |
  • Recommendations |
  • Leaderboards |
  • Trends |
 
 
Add Bookmark
 

The Picture of Dorian Gray

Oscar Wilde
 
83 %
Not to be missed
Buy on amazon.com
Add to my collection
  •  Already read
  •  Want to read
  •  Reading now
  •  Own
  •  Want
  •  Don't want
  •  Borrowed
Remove from collection
  • You rated 0/5 Stars.
  • 0.5/5.0
  • 1/5
  • 1.5/5.0
  • 2/5
  • 2.5/5.0
  • 3/5
  • 3.5/5.0
  • 4/5
  • 4.5/5.0
  • 5/5
clear rating

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 a... (show more)

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.

Dorian Gray – decadent archetype, anti-hero of Oscar Wilde’s only novel, an underground classic which scandalized society upon its publication in 1890. Dorian Gray, the debauched libertine who retains a veneer of eternal youth during decades of increasingly outlandish vice, depravity and corruption, while his portrait ages and rots in an attic. THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY is presented here in its rare original incarnation, the overtly homoerotic Lippincott edition, with an appendix sampling Wilde’s later revisions. Also included is a brilliant introduction by Jeremy Reed, detailing the two editions and realigning the book’s position in the history of subversive underground fiction. With its outré elements of homosexuality, drug abuse and supernatural horror, DORIAN GRAY remains Wilde’s most extreme creation, whilst also containing many of the mordant epigrams for which he is most renowned. It is a true classic of renegade literature. (show less)

Related Media

Photo Gallery

51k6ohvss+l
1 out of 50
419weujxt8l
2 out of 50
Autoscale-110
3 out of 50
Autoscale-110
4 out of 50
Autoscale-110
5 out of 50
Autoscale-110
6 out of 50
41qv1ch6q4l
7 out of 50
61zcg85p50l
8 out of 50
517c3bmybyl
9 out of 50
5175bsffwel
10 out of 50
219zbzketyl
11 out of 50
41xinvha8il
12 out of 50
41kjcrdmmbl
13 out of 50
510ybmy7apl
14 out of 50
41v0zcafgnl
15 out of 50
410893n2vxl
16 out of 50
Autoscale-110
17 out of 50
51l70qxlahl
18 out of 50
51uuskxcxzl
19 out of 50
41cubbszshl
20 out of 50
41xqbmp6wvl
21 out of 50
510v8b5kpyl
22 out of 50
41gbbya2evl
23 out of 50
51l70qxlahl
24 out of 50
51kjqsy47pl
25 out of 50
214phcx82kl
26 out of 50
51c5jxge82l
27 out of 50
21q008vb7kl
28 out of 50
51az8axbmdl
29 out of 50
417frb79t3l
30 out of 50
51mjt54q4yl
31 out of 50
41sm6f9mmnl
32 out of 50
51zotc2w6il
33 out of 50
31mlceleidl
34 out of 50
Autoscale-110
35 out of 50
511bqd2mbxl
36 out of 50
Autoscale-110
37 out of 50
41w8dv82shl
38 out of 50
Autoscale-110
39 out of 50
51qjua6pfol
40 out of 50
51w2byjzlpl
41 out of 50
41us7sgmycl
42 out of 50
31f2x50rwyl
43 out of 50
512tmftp5bl
44 out of 50
41iow-qriil
45 out of 50
510hkamemzl
46 out of 50
41p789k4g9l
47 out of 50
51cfje4164l
48 out of 50
41wf76tpryl
49 out of 50
51dn8l+mgcl
50 out of 50
 
 
 

Similar Books

You might like these

  • 84 %
    The Importance of Being Earnest Oscar Wilde
     
  • 81 %
    An Ideal Husband Oscar Wilde
     
See more go
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Reviews (See all 5,046) Write a reviewfor this

It's a hit!

Never have a I read a book that made me laugh out loud as many times as this one. Yes, it's mostly pointless, mostly fluff, but it's so extravagan... (show more)

Never have a I read a book that made me laugh out loud as many times as this one. Yes, it's mostly pointless, mostly fluff, but it's so extravagantly pointless and fluffy one can't help but be amused, or at least intrigued. This book is a sensual and intellectual delight. Full of Wilde's usual wit and flair. And yes it even has morals; that which the book so frequently mocks. One of the reasons this tale is so interesting is its abundance of intentional contradiction and flippancy.

The only reason I don't give a full 5 star rating is chapter eleven, in which Wilde seems intent on using the description of one of Dorian's developmental stages as an excuse to impress the world with his knowledge of various crafts and artifacts.

If you're a literary student that has been led to believe a story must be written according to conventional forms you won't enjoy this book (and you have been horribly misled in the purpose and value of literature).

Ordinarily when I've finished reading a book I donate it to a friend, or a thrift store, or library, etc.. But I think I'll be holding on to this one. Turning randomly to any chapter in which Lord Henry is pontificating is bound to bring a smirk to my face and/or a chuckle to my lips. (show less)

 
Shawn Chidester
 
by Shawn Chidester
No, it's a flop!

"There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all. "

When the man who wrote the introdu... (show more)

"There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or badly written. That is all. "

When the man who wrote the introduction - a fan of the book - and the book's writer himself both warn you against it, perhaps you ought to listen. Indeed, Wilde's preface is Dorian Gray in a nutshell: meaningless contradictions and unsupported arguments, neither of them interesting or well-written. Most of the reviews I've seen are overwhelmingly positive, but the picture this book drew in my mind is no less ugly than Dorian Gray's own becomes.

Excessively long and clumsy sentences and paragraphs fill most of the novel's length; a paragraph nearly or over two pages in length is not uncommon. The content is usually poorly-disguised political ranting, undisguised misogyny (including what is essentially a four-page monologue stating that the best thing a woman has ever done is commit suicide), or a flight of utterly irrelevant, self-indulgent whimsy on Wilde's part. I've read so much about the prose, and all of it extremely favorable, yet I've rarely read a novel with worse prose. The dialogue is rarely any better, and what I take to be Wilde's famous wit does not impress me.

Most of the eleventh chapter is nothing but a long list of items Dorian has collected, with brief descriptions. Never is it stated what Dorian does with any of them, or what he sees in them. It is obvious fluff, like so much of the novel. Were the fluff cut and only the substance used, The Picture of Dorian Gray would be a short novella or a long short story, and much better off, too. Everything I've ever learned about writing screams against the way this book was written. The resolution - in which it is revealed that Dorian Gray's only true sin is a bad temper, without which he might have lived a happy life forever - is actually the best part.

Classic or not, this is not a book I would recommend to a friend. (show less)

 
 
by Chris
More Reviews
  • Super_review

    Funny, the places where I find my name contained. This book is amazing, and by rights warrants an immediate reread.

    “Those who find ugly meanings in beautiful things are corrupt without being charming. This is a fault. Those who find beautiful meanings in beautiful things are the cultivated. For these there is hope."

    “Those who are faithful only know the trivial side of love; it is the faithless who know love’s tragedies.”

    “It is only the sacred things that are worth touching.”
    ... (show more)

    Funny, the places where I find my name contained. This book is amazing, and by rights warrants an immediate reread.

    “Those who find ugly meanings in beautiful things are corrupt without being charming. This is a fault. Those who find beautiful meanings in beautiful things are the cultivated. For these there is hope."

    “Those who are faithful only know the trivial side of love; it is the faithless who know love’s tragedies.”

    “It is only the sacred things that are worth touching.”

    “Dorian is far too wise not to do foolish things now and then, my dear Basil.”

    “There were opium dens where one could buy oblivion, dens of horror where the memory of old sins could be destroyed by the madness of sins that were new.”

    “’I give you the truths of tomorrow.’
    ‘I prefer the mistakes of today.’”

    “The books that the world calls immoral are books that show the world its own shame.” (show less)

     
     
    by Facebook User on Nov 09, 2009 at 08:59PM

    Already read

    Is this review helpful? yes no
     
  • Carol Edwards
    Super_review

    I had never heard of Dorian Gray until I saw the film "League of Extraordinary Gentlemen." I wouldn't have thought anything of his character, had not my husband (then my boyfriend) said, "There are so many things they got wrong with him." I asked how so, to which he replied, "Well, for one, it wasn't forbidden for people to look at the picture." We got caught up in the movie after that, but I remember remarking to myself that I should read the book.
    So here I... (show more)

    I had never heard of Dorian Gray until I saw the film "League of Extraordinary Gentlemen." I wouldn't have thought anything of his character, had not my husband (then my boyfriend) said, "There are so many things they got wrong with him." I asked how so, to which he replied, "Well, for one, it wasn't forbidden for people to look at the picture." We got caught up in the movie after that, but I remember remarking to myself that I should read the book.
    So here I am, five years later, finally finished with the book. I am amazed at the misconceptions I had - first, Dorian was not dark haired and dark eyed - he was blond with blue eyes and pale skin. Second, he didn't start out evil - it was the sefish exercise of flattery and influence by Lord Henry that started him on that path in the first place. All of Lord Henry's "theories" and "experiments" were the cause of Dorian's initial temptation into the life he ended up worshipping. I hated Lord Henry from the start, and pitied Dorian, thinking that if Lord Henry had not happened upon him at choice moments, he could have pulled himself out of the mire into which he wandered. However, as the book went on, I felt less sympathy with Dorian, and in the final moment when he tried to destroy the painting, not from a desire to repent, but from a desire to rid himself of the evidence of his past, I was glad it ended as it did.
    This book was fascinating and intriguing. I loved the prose and the almost poetic way Wilde constructed his sentances and descriptions, and his sharp, sarcastic commentary on society provided much amusement. I will read it again, and enjoy it again, but I will take everything Lord Henry and Dorian say with a grain of salt, because it is from those opinions and beliefs that Dorian's degredation began, and it led to ruin. "What does it profit a man to gain the whole world but lose his own soul?" (show less)

     
     
    by Carol Edwards on Oct 07, 2009 at 09:11PM

    Already read

    Is this review helpful? yes no
     
  • See all reviews
    Write a review
     
 
 

Conversations

Please log in to join the conversation

 
  • 0

    I find it odd that a portrait of Franz Liszt is on the cover.

    Facebook User about 1 month ago
     
     
     
     
     
    Save message
     
     
  • 0

    Oscar Wilde (Dublino 1854-Parigi 1900)

    Nel 1895 fu condannato per omosessualità a due anni di carcere : esperienza che lo segnerà per il resto della vità.
    Tra le sue opere:Salomé, Il Ventaglio di Lady Windemere, De Profundis, Il Ritratto duDorian Gray.

    Poeta, romanziere, commediografo, è senza àltro il più importante scrittore dell`epoca vittoriana.

    DE PROFUNDIS ( dei suoi libri è il mio preferito )
    Solo nel 1959 è stata pubblicata la versione integrale di DE Profundis, lettera che Osrcar Wilde, detenuto per sodomia, scrisse nel 1897 al suo giovane amante Bosie: intenso documento, nato da la lotta tragica e perdente che un artista ribelleingaggia contro una scietà repressiva e ipocrita. Personalità affascinante e contraddittoria, Wilde si presenta contemporaneamente como un uomo fiaccato, immiserito e come la replica di un Cristo che egli trasforma in un sofferente artista romantaco perseguitato dai filistei d`ogni tempo e paese.. Abile nel far convivere naschera e volto, serietà morale e civetteria teatrale, Wilde alterna qui ad aspri umori penitenziali orgoglioso, virile revindicazione della propria grandezza di artista.

    Facebook User 4 months ago
     
     
     
     
     
    Save message
     
     
  • Ismaele Marongiu 2

    Oscar Wilde. Il ritratto di Dorian Gray

    Londra, 1880. Seduto in Picadilly Circus vedi passare un tizio con un girasole in mano, vestito con abiti vistosi e che ha tutta l’aria di essere un perfetto dandy. Allora ti accosti al tuo amico londinese e gli chiedi, in perfetto inglese, Who is? E lui ti dice che è uno scrittore, un certo Oscar Wilde. Uno che è accusato di sfruttare le idee del Ruskin (un saggista dell’epoca), lo stile del Pater (saggista e critico) e lo spirito spicciolo di Whistler (un pittore americano). Lo stesso Whistler lo riprese bonariamente, durante una conversazione; dopo aver fatto una battuta più bella delle altre e aver sentito il signor Wilde affermare che gli sarebbe piaciuto averla detta lui, Whistler gli rispose: -La dirai, Oscar; la dirai!-

    Oscar Wilde è certamente uno dei personaggi più eccentrici ed eccessivi della letteratura inglese; le sue opere sono sempre brillanti, marcate da un’ironia tagliente e raffinata che si riversa sui clichè della morale vittoriana e sulle sue figure cardine. Il suo stile, derivato dallo studio di Gautier e Flaubert, è raffinato e suasivo, se non addirittura ipnotico.

    ‘Il ritratto di Dorian Gray’, pubblicato per la prima volta nel 1891, è di sicuro il suo migliore romanzo. Racconta la vita di Dorian Gray, un giovane < …meravigliosamente bello, con quelle sue labbra scarlatte dalla curva delicata, quei suoi occhi azzurri pieni di franchezza, quei suoi capelli d’oro ondulati. >. Dorian Gray è nipote dell’ultimo Lord Kelso, è molto ricco e conduce una vita agiata.

    Nell’incipit lo conosciamo attraverso le parole di Basilio, l’amico pittore; Dorian Gray è atteso nel pomeriggio per posare ad un ritratto che deve essere terminato. E proprio quel pomeriggio, dopo aver conosciuto Lord Henry, mentre guardava estasiato il ritratto finito, in cui Dorian pronuncia queste parole: < Se fossi io a restare sempre giovane e il ritratto a invecchiare! Per questo… per questo darei qualunque cosa; si, non c’è nulla che non sarei disposto a dare! Darei perfino l’anima mia, per questo! >.

    Tempo dopo Dorian, si innamora follemente di una ragazza, Sybil Vane, che lavora come attrice in un teatro di bassa lega; i due si fidanzano nonostante lei sia di un ceto inferiore. Ma Dorian rimane profondamente deluso e indignato quando scopre che il suo amore ha reso Sybil una pessima attrice: < [parla Dorian; NDR] Si –gridò- hai ucciso il mio amore. […] Ti amavo perché eri meravigliosa, perché possedevi genio e intelligenza, perché traducevi in realtà i sogni dei grandi poeti e davi forma e sostanza ai fantasmi dell’arte. Hai portato via tutto questo. Sei superficiale e stupida. >.

    Da quel momento la vita di Dorian Gray precipita in un vortice; Sybil viene trovata morta e lui scorge i primi mutamenti nel quadro di Basilio, l’incredulità lascia il posto alla certezza quando capisce che: < …l’espressione strana che aveva osservato nel volto del ritratto sembrava esserci tuttora, anzi, essersi ulteriormente intensificata. La luce vivida e palpitante del sole gli mostrava attorno alla bocca le linee crudeli, con la stessa chiarezza come se si fosse guardato allo specchio dopo aver commesso qualcosa di tremendo. >.

    Ed è proprio questo il patto tra Dorian e il ritratto: tutti i segni che la vita dissoluta e il tempo lasciano sul viso di una persona comune, appaiono su un quadro ben chiuso nella soffitta della sua casa, mentre Dorian rimane un eterno ventenne. Col tempo varie voci cominciano a spargersi per la città, parlano di corruzione e dissoluzione, di immoralità e perversione; sono queste voci che portano Basilio a casa di Dorian in una notte che gli sarà fatale.

    < [Parla Lord Henry; NDR] Lo sviluppo di noi stessi è lo scopo della vita; ciascuno di noi è al mondo per tradurre perfettamente in realtà la propria natura. Oggigiorno la gente ha paura di se stessa. Tutti hanno dimenticato quello che è il più alto di tutti i doveri, il dovere che abbiamo verso noi stessi. Sono caritatevoli, certo; danno da mangiare agli affamati e vestono gli ignudi, ma le loro anime restano affamate e nude. Il coraggio è scomparso dalla nostra razza; in realtà forse non l’abbiamo mai avuto. Il terrore della società che è la base della morale e il terrore di Dio che è il segreto della religione sono le due cose che ci governano. >.

    Ismaele Marongiu

    Ismaele Marongiu about 1 year ago
     
     
     
     
     
    Save message
     
     
 
 
 
 
Advertisement

Lists

This book has been added to these lists:

  • rakas joulupukki. contains 7 items created by Facebook User
     
  • Books I want to read contains 24 items created by Mackenzie Rose Walsh
     
  • Books I've Read! contains 7 items created by Mollie Connelly
     
 
 
 
 

More Stuff

  • Albums
  • Restaurants
  • Beer
  • Slopes
  • Books
  • TV Shows
  • iPhone Apps
  • Video Games
  • Movies

About Us

LivingSocial.com is a social discovery and cataloging network that allows people to review and share their favorite movies, books, games, music, restaurants and beer

  • About Us
  • Follow @LivingSocial on Twitter
  • FAQ
  • Press
  • Contact Us

Feedback

We love hearing from the people that use our site.

Send us some feedback
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
Quantcast
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
next prev
 
next prev
 
Built by Visual BookshelfContact Report   
  • About
  • Advertising
  • Developers
  • Careers
  • Terms
  • Blog
  • Widgets
  • ■
  • Find Friends
  • Privacy
  • Mobile
  • Help