Elegant, insightful, old-fashioned, brilliant.
Author of nearly 60 books - how did Auchincloss do it? A long life (92 years) certainly helped, and he was publishing to the end. While writing had to compete his profession as lawyer, his specialization in wills and trusts presumably provided insights into wealth and family dynamics that he could tap for his literary work. A Herculean life achievement, though.
As to his writing itself, views probably differ. Many will find him quintessentially "male, pale, and stale." For my part, after three novels, I'm still lapping it up. Certainly, he writes almost exclusively about old-money Manhattan elites, educated at prep schools then Yale or Harvard. Here, Auchincloss is writing what he knows, having attended St. Bernard's School, Groton School and Yale University. While his political inclinations were basically conservative, discomfort with America's growing class divide led him to vote for Bill Clinton in 1992. To this extent, in writing about the moneyed elite, he has his eyes open: he writes about both unsympathetic, venal businessmen as well as those from the elite who suffer ill health, heartbreak, or any of the many ways in which life can go wrong, even among the upper crust.
East Side Story describes four generations of the Carnochan family. It starts with the patriarch, David Carnochan, who emigrated from Scotland to establish a thread business in New York in the mid-19th century, passing down through key members of the family until the 1960s. Although described as a novel, it is essentially a series of sketches of a dozen individuals, exploring how the Carnochan family culture intersected with personal character, changing social rules, and the random events of life. On these topics, Auchincloss is an insightful observer: he notes, for example, that successful marriages are not always based on mutual love, and that privilege and skill do not guarantee a successful career.
Highly recommended.