Main Street: The Story of Carol Kennicott - eBook
Stock No: WW48260EB
Main Street: The Story of Carol Kennicott - eBook  -     By: Sinclair Lewis

Main Street: The Story of Carol Kennicott - eBook

Penguin Classics / 1995 / ePub

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Stock No: WW48260EB

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Penguin Classics / 1995 / ePub
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Product Information

Title: Main Street: The Story of Carol Kennicott - eBook
By: Sinclair Lewis
Format: DRM Protected ePub
Vendor: Penguin Classics
Publication Date: 1995
ISBN: 9781101640234
ISBN-13: 9781101640234
Stock No: WW48260EB

Publisher's Description

The first of Sinclair Lewis’s great successes, Main Street shattered the sentimental American myth of happy small-town life with its satire of narrow-minded provincialism. Reflecting his own unhappy childhood in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, Lewis’s sixth novel attacked the conformity and dullness he saw in midwestern village life. Young college graduate Carol Milford moves from the city to tiny Gopher Prairie after marrying the local doctor, and tries to bring culture to the small town. But her efforts to reform the prairie village are met by a wall of gossip, greed, conventionality, pitifully unambitious cultural endeavors, and—worst of all—the pettiness and bigotry of small-town minds.

Lewis’s portrayal of a marriage torn by disillusionment and a woman forced into compromises is at once devastating social satire and persuasive realism. His subtle characterizations and intimate details of small-town America make Main Street a complex and compelling work and established Lewis as an important figure in twentieth-century American literature.

Author Bio

Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951) won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1930, the first American novelist to be so honored. He was born in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, the son of a doctor. After an extremely unhappy childhood, he went to Yale but left before graduation to work in Upton Sinclair’s socialist colony at Helicon Hall in Englewood, New Jersey. Unable to make a living as a freelance writer, he returned to Yale and graduated in 1908. In 1914 he published his first novel, Our Mr. Wrenn: The Romantic Adventures of a Gentle Man. But it was not until his sixth novel, Main Street (1920), that he won recognition as an important American novelist, the first to challenge the myth of the happy quintessentially American small town. His major works are Babbitt (1922), Arrowsmith (1925), which won a Pulitzer Prize that Lewis refused to accept, Elmer Gantry (1927), Dodsworth (1929), and It Can’t Happen Here (1935), which he also wrote as a play in 1936. Married and divorced twice, the second time to pioneering newspaperwoman Dorothy Thompson, Lewis was a prolific writer, publishing dozens of books and innumerable articles throughout his career. He died alone in Rome on January 10, 1951, and his ashes were returned to Sauk Centre, the “Main Street” he’d rejected so many decades before but which in death took him back as its own.

Editorial Reviews

By the Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature

"Sinclair Lewis observed his fellow white Midwesterners with terrifying precision. This book, a social novel from 1920 with cutting satirical elements, features a woman named Carol. . . . Like Dorothea Brooke of Middlemarch, Carol is a cosseted young woman who wants to change her world and be useful, yet is restricted by the patriarchal society she lives in. Lewis documents the life of this educated and liberal white American woman and her anxieties about marriage, small towns, and social reform, with great sympathy and wisdom." —Min Jin Lee, The New Yorker

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