The Painted Veil - W. Somerset Maugham

(11 User reviews)   2475
By Carol Nguyen Posted on Mar 1, 2026
In Category - Gentle Worlds
W. Somerset Maugham W. Somerset Maugham
English
Picture this: you're a young, beautiful socialite who married a man you don't love because you were afraid of being left on the shelf. Now you're bored in a foreign country and start an affair with a charming, but shallow, government official. You think you're being discreet, but your husband—a quiet, awkward bacteriologist—finds out. And instead of the dramatic scene you expect, he gives you a chilling choice: come with me to a remote Chinese village in the grip of a deadly cholera epidemic, or I'll divorce you and name your lover, ruining you both. That's the brutal setup of 'The Painted Veil.' It's not a romance. It's the story of a woman forced on a terrifying journey into the heart of a plague, and more importantly, into the heart of her own emptiness. Maugham doesn't give us a heroine to cheer for, but a flawed, real person to understand. This book asks a hard question: when the pretty surface of your life is ripped away, what's left underneath?
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Let me tell you about Kitty Fane. She's young, pretty, and trapped. Pressured into marrying the serious, devoted bacteriologist Walter, she follows him to 1920s Hong Kong. She finds him dull and the expat society stifling. So, she starts an affair with Charles Townsend, the Assistant Colonial Secretary—a man as smooth and handsome as Walter is reserved.

The Story

Walter discovers the affair. His revenge is cold and brilliant. He offers Kitty a way out: if Charles will leave his wife and marry her, Walter will grant a divorce. Kitty, sure of Charles's love, agrees. But Charles panics. He won't risk his career. Humiliated and furious, Walter gives Kitty her real choice: accompany him immediately to Mei-tan-fu, a remote interior region being decimated by cholera, or face a scandalous divorce alone. With no options, Kitty goes. In the heart of the epidemic, surrounded by death and the selfless work of French nuns, the veil of Kitty's shallow life is torn away. She begins to see the strength in Walter, the emptiness in herself, and the possibility of a different kind of life.

Why You Should Read It

This book gripped me because Kitty is so frustratingly real. She's not instantly likable, but you watch her change. The cholera-stricken village isn't just a setting; it's a pressure cooker that forces every character to show their true self. Maugham writes with a surgeon's precision, cutting away pretense. He explores big ideas—what gives life meaning, the search for forgiveness, the difference between love and obsession—but he wraps them in a story that feels urgent and personal. I kept thinking about it long after I finished. It’s a quiet, devastating look at how we build our identities and what happens when that construction falls apart.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves character-driven stories that pack an emotional punch. If you enjoyed the moral complexity of novels like Passage to India or the sharp psychological insight of an author like Edith Wharton, you'll find a lot to love here. It’s a relatively short book, but it’s dense with feeling and thought. Don't pick it up for a light, happy escape. Pick it up for a powerful, unforgettable journey into a woman's awakening, set against a backdrop of duty, disease, and the desperate search for redemption.



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Susan Scott
7 months ago

Simply put, the character development leaves a lasting impact. A true masterpiece.

Karen Young
1 year ago

A must-have for anyone studying this subject.

Karen Thompson
1 year ago

Beautifully written.

Amanda Moore
1 year ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

Donald White
2 years ago

If you enjoy this genre, the atmosphere created is totally immersive. A true masterpiece.

5
5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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