An edition of Main Street / Babbitt (1992)

Main Street & Babbitt

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Last edited by wjhollerich
December 18, 2022 | History
An edition of Main Street / Babbitt (1992)

Main Street & Babbitt

  • 1 Want to read

In Main Street and Babbitt, Sinclair Lewis drew on his boyhood memories of Sauk Centre, Minnesota, to reveal as no writer had done before the complacency and conformity of middle-class life in America. These remarkable novels combine brilliant satire with a lingering affection for the men and women who, as Lewis wrote of Babbitt, want "to seize something more than motor cars and a house before it's too late."

Main Street (1920), Lewis's first triumph, was a phenomenal event in American publishing and cultural history. Lewis's idealistic, imaginative heroine, Carol Kennicott, longs "to get [her] hands on one of these prairie towns and make it beautiful," but when her doctor husband brings her to Gopher Prairie, she finds that the romance of the American frontier has dwindled to the drab reality of the American Middle West. Carol first struggles against and then flees the social tyrannies and cultural emptiness of Gopher Prairie, only to submit at last to the conventions of village life. The great romantic satire of its decade, Main Street is a wry, sad, funny account of a woman who attempts to challenge the hypocrisy and narrow-mindedness of her community.

"I know of no American novel that more accurately presents the real America," wrote H.L. Mencken when Babbitt appeared in 1922. "As an old professor of Babbittry I welcome him as an almost perfect specimen. Every American city swarms with his brothers. He is America incarnate, exuberant and exquisite." In the character of George F. Babbitt, the boisterous, vulgar, worried, gadget-loving real estate man from Zenith, Lewis fashioned a new and enduring figure in American literature - the total conformist. Babbitt is a "joiner," who thinks and feels with the crowd. Lewis surrounds him with a gallery of familiar American types - small businessmen, Rotarians, Elks, boosters, supporters of evangelical Christianity. In bitingly satirical scenes of club lunches, after-dinner speeches, trade association conventions, fishing trips, and Sunday School committees, Lewis reproduces the noisy restlessness of American commercial culture.

In 1930 Sinclair Lewis was the first American to be awarded the Nobel Prize for literature, largely for his achievement in Babbitt. These early novels not only define a crucial period in American history - from America's "coming of age" just before World War I to the dizzying boom of the twenties - they also continue to astonish us with essential truths about the country we live in today.

Publish Date
Publisher
Library of America
Language
English
Pages
898

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Main Street & Babbitt
Main Street & Babbitt
1992, Library of America
in English
Cover of: Main Street & Babbitt
Main Street & Babbitt
1992, Library of America
in English
Cover of: Main Street / Babbitt
Main Street / Babbitt
1992, Library of America, Library of America, The
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
New York
Series
The Library of America ;
Genre
Fiction.
Other Titles
Babbitt., Main Street and Babbitt.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
813/.52
Library of Congress
PS3523.E94 M2 1992

The Physical Object

Pagination
898 p. ;
Number of pages
898

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL1568318M
ISBN 10
0940450615
LCCN
91058224
LibraryThing
300912
Goodreads
11374

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL32621857W

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
December 18, 2022 Edited by wjhollerich work ID
November 13, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
May 19, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
May 13, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record