Advice for first time readers of Sinclair Lewis:
Start with Main Street. I started with Babbitt, a worthy
novel, but inferior to Main Street. They share a nimble,
though often heavy handed touch of irony, and good
characterization; and Mr. Lewis trenchant social
commantary is present in both. We all know the story:
Carol Kennicott (nee Milford), educated at tiny Blodgett
College, wants action: She wants to travel and live in a
big city where she can see plays and hobnob with
intellectuals. She meets future husband Dr. Will
Kennicott at a St. Paul dinner party; (Throughout the
novel, her feelings toward Will oscillate between
admiration for his efficient practice and good nature,
and discomfort with his depthless character). Will
coaxes Carol onto a train bound for the hamlet of Gopher
Prairie, Minnesota. The bulk of the novel, which,
considering the context, could be considered picaresque,
consists of Carols haphazard attempts to reform the
obdurate, immobile mindsets of the citizens of her new
home. Among the improvements Carol suggests are a
library board composed of the well read men of the town,
and a campaign to renew interest in reading (In a town
where the great books are bypassed for the contemporary
moralistic, optimistic, and religious authors), and a
theater company containing one fine actor and a
supporting cast of hams, who bungle through one play
(the frivolous Girl from Kankakee; poor carol had Shaw
or Sophocles in mind. Throughout the novel, Carol
evinces a blinding fear of living as a stereotypic
denizen of the American Main Street; her fears are
intensified by the birth of her son another fetter that
could prevent a night train escape from Gopher Prairie),
and the loss of several friends (the most notable being
Miles Bjornstam, a Swedish horse trader who leaves for
Canada after his wifes death) Made desperate by the
seeming ineffectuality of her reform efforts
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