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         Lewis Sinclair:     more books (97)
  1. The Sinclair Lewis Collection (Halcyon Classics) by Sinclair Lewis, 2009-08-03
  2. Sinclair Lewis by Sheldon N. Grebstein, 1962-06
  3. Babbitt - Sinclair Lewis by Sinclair Lewis, 2010-02-16
  4. Elmer Gantry by Sinclair Lewis, 2010-06-13
  5. ELMER GANTRY by Sinclair Lewis, 1929
  6. Babbitt (Oxford World's Classics) by Sinclair Lewis, Gordon Hutner, 2010-06-03
  7. Minnesota Stories of Sinclair Lewis by Sinclair Lewis, 2005-06-15
  8. Arrowsmith [First Trade Edition] by Sinclair Lewis, 1925-01-01
  9. Work of Art by Sinclair Lewis, 1999-12
  10. Sinclair Lewis's Arrowsmith (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations)
  11. Main Street-a Signet Classic by Sinclair Lewis, 1961
  12. The Greatest Hits of Sinclair Lewis by Sinclair Lewis, Greatest Hits Series, 2009-05-09
  13. Sinclair Lewis: A Descriptive Bibliography, Second Edition by Stephen R. Pastore, 2009-08-15
  14. Babbitt, by Sinclair Lewis by Sinclair Lewis, 1980

41. Sinclair Lewis
Translate this page Home_Page sinclair lewis (1885-1951), literarios y rechazó el Premio Pulitzer en1926 por El doctor Arrowsmith, lewis aceptó el Premio nobel de Literatura
http://www.epdlp.com/lewis.html
Sinclair Lewis
N ovelista estadounidense muy imitado por escritores posteriores, tanto en su estilo naturalista como en su temática. Lewis cambió la tradicional visión romántica y complaciente de la vida estadounidense por otra mucho más realista, e incluso amarga. Nació en Sauk Center (Minnesota), el 7 de febrero de 1885 y estudió en la Universidad de Yale. De 1907 a 1916 trabajó como reportero y editor literario. En Calle mayor (1920), Lewis desarrolla por primera vez un tema que se convertirá en leitmotif de sus principales obras: la monotonía, la frustración emocional y la falta de valores espirituales e intelectuales de la clase media estadounidense. Su novela Babbitt (1922) ofrece un retrato despiadado del arquetipo del hombre de negocios de una ciudad pequeña que acepta ciegamente los valores sociales materialistas y éticos de su entorno. La palabra 'Babbitt', que designa a este tipo de persona, ha pasado a formar parte de la lengua común. En El doctor Arrowsmith (1925), expone la falta de idealismo científico que en ocasiones se observa entre los médicos; Elmer Gantry (1927) retrata la figura de un falso e hipócrita líder religioso infiltrado en la iglesia Protestante. Otras de sus novelas, como

42. Lewis, Sinclair
sinclair lewis, lewis was born in 1885. He achieved success writing about the midwest.In 1930, he became the first American author to be awarded the nobel
http://www.hugeprint.com/authors/L/Lewis, Sinclair.htm
Sinclair Lewis Lewis was born in 1885. He achieved success writing about the midwest. In 1930, he became the first American author to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. He died in 1951. Babbitt Main Street

43. LewisS
laureates/1930/lewisautobio.html sinclair lewis outlines his life in his speechfor the nobel Committee, on receiving the nobel Prize for Literature in 1930.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/20thC/LewisS.htm
Sinclair Lewis (1885 - 1951) a web guide from literaryhistory.com main page 20th century authors General Articles http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1930/lewis-autobio.html Sinclair Lewis outlines his life in his speech for the Nobel Committee, on receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1930. http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/slewis.htm A biography on Lewis from the Books and Writers web site. An online exhibition of original editions and dustjackets of Sinclair Lewis and F.Scott Fitzgerald, quite beautiful, with a short essay on the novels. From the George Mason University Library Special Collections. http://www.pwpl.org/collections/special/SinclairLewis A description of the Sinclair Lewis holdings at the Port Washington (NY) Public Library, and a brief biography of Lewis. http://www.saukherald.com/lewis/stories.html The Sauk Centre Herald, the author's hometown newspaper, has reprinted a few articles about its Sinclair Lewis Days. http://lilt.ilstu.edu/separry/lewis.html A Sinclair Lewis web site has a brief bio. main page 20th century authors Updated 2/28/2002

44. Sinclair Lewis
sinclair lewis was born in Sauk Centre, Minnesota in 1885, the son of a doctor. in1930 capped it all by becoming the first American to win the nobel Prize for
http://www.goodreports.net/sinlin.htm
SINCLAIR LEWIS: REBEL FROM MAIN STREET
By Richard Lingeman
Several years ago a totally unknown novelist from the mid-West wrote an essay in Harper’s asking whatever happened to the "big social novel" in America. It is a question that comes up quite a lot in literary circles, usually in relation to the larger question of what constitutes realism in fiction. Many of the world’s most celebrated authors in the late twentieth century - Marquez, Grass, DeLillo, Murakami - have written big social novels, but they tend toward "magic realism" and the paranoid, fantastic, and supernatural. Their work seems not quite of the world. Is it realism? The author of the Harper’s piece (yes, that was Jonathan Franzen pre-plugging The Corrections ) quotes Philip Roth’s complaint, made in the 1960s, that in America reality has surpassed fiction’s ability to represent it. But Roth’s own work in the 1990s put the lie to that, while journalist-turned-novelist Tom Wolfe has continued to campaign for a literature that will reject fashionable literary trends like postmodernism and magic realism, and go out into the street to deal with life as it is really lived by Americans. Now Sinclair Lewis, another product of the American mid-West, is one of Tom Wolfe’s heroes . . .

45. Nobel Prize For Literature/Nobelpreis Für Literatur/Nobelprijs Voor Literatuur/
5. Which nobel laureates have used pseudonyms Hamsun, Hermann Hesse, Johannes Jensen,Erik Axel Karlfeldt, Halldór Laxness, sinclair lewis, Maurice Maeterlinck
http://httpd.chello.nl/~s.gipman/
Welcome to Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau Stan P.A. Gipman at NIJMEGEN, the Netherlands. The Bureau will send you free information about many aspects of the Nobel Laureates for literature. You can also send a letter with your questions or suggestions to: Mr Stan P.A. Gipman, Postweg 78, 6523 LD NIJMEGEN, the Netherlands tel. +31 (0)24 322 58 42 The Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau has a lot of information and documentation on the 98 Nobel Prize Winners for Literature, 9 women and 89 men. The Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau answers the following questions and other questions you might have, but consults first ............. the sources and also Alfred Nobel ? The Nobel Prize for Literature Bureau Gipman is a non-profit and one-man enterprise; the bureau is not affiliated with the Nobel Foundation or the Swedish Academy.
last update November 1, 2002

46. Antenati: Sinclair Lewis
Translate this page Nel 1930 ebbe il nobel fu il primo letterato sinclair ebbe il primo grande successocon Main street Con quest'opera lewis definì l'ambito sociologico della
http://www.girodivite.it/antenati/xx2sec/-lewis.htm
Sinclair Lewis
Sinclair Lewis
nobel Babbitt (1922), ritratto dell'americano medio, con i suoi mutevoli umori, il conformismo, la sua noia, i vani tentati vi di evasione, tutto affari e efficenza, chiesa presbiteriana e famiglia, sorti della nazione e evasioni extradomestiche, vocabo lario prefabbricato e goffo arrampicamento sociale. Anche questo libro ebbe un enorme successo.
Le motivazioni del premio nobel: "for his vigorous and graphic art of description and his ability to create, with wit and humour, new types of characters".
Narrativa USA tra le due guerre Homepage Dizionario autori Autori aree linguistiche ... an opensource project

47. HoustonChronicle.com - 'Sinclair Lewis' By Richard Lingeman
In the 20th century, sinclair lewis was America's most successful one, declininga Pulitzer Prize but accepting the nobel Prize for Literature.
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/ae/books/reviews/1295030

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March 14, 2002, 11:07PM
'Rebel From Main Street'
Biographer seeks to revive respect for Sinclair Lewis
By SHARAN GIBSON
SINCLAIR LEWIS:
Rebel From Main Street.
By Richard Lingeman.
Random House, $35. I'VE always thought satire the most difficult kind of writing. The targets of your work will inevitably respond, and you run a much greater chance of being misunderstood than do mystery or romance writers. Family members may see themselves in your characters there goes private bliss. Who in his right mind would be a satirist? In the 20th century, Sinclair Lewis was America's most successful one, declining a Pulitzer Prize but accepting the Nobel Prize for Literature. By the time he died in 1951, he had embedded terms like "babbittry" and "Gantryism" into our national consciousness and made "Main Street" a code word for small-town smugness. Then, 10 years after Lewis' death, Mark Schorer made him the subject of a particularly mean-spirited literary biography. Now comes Richard Lingeman with

48. Sinclair Lewis 1885-1951, 66 Years - Inspiration
detractors further moaned when sinclair lewis' book Dodsworth (1929), the storyof an American Captain of Industry, was chosen to receive the nobel Prize for
http://www.tdl.com/~julian/the-writers-corner/_lewis.htm
Inspiration... Sinclair Lewis 1885-1951, 66 years The man who was probably the greatest satirist of his era and who gave us Elmer Gantry (1927), Main Street (1920) and Babbitt (1922) died alone in Rome, on January 10, 1951 at the age of 66. A red-head with a quick temper, he was angry most of his life. His Arrowsmith(1925) won him a Pulitzer Prize for Fiction but he refused to accept it. He did accept the Nobel Prize for Literature for his Dodsworth (1929), the first American to win one, but "Red" Lewis deliver a scalding speech at the Swedish Academy ceremonies attacking the "near-sighed American academicians" for not recognizing the importance of a new generation of American writers, like himself, who had broke with the traditional and genteel view of reality. He listed others whom he felt had been slighted, Hemingway, Sandburg, Faulkner, Cather, Dreiser and O'Neill. Sinclair Lewis was born in 1885, in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, a flat, corn and wheat growing, midwestern town much like his Gopher Prairie in Main Street (1920). He was the third son of a country doctor whose father was a doctor, a country doctor much like the character Doc Vickerson in Arrowsmith (1925). In 1903, at 18 his father sent him back East to college, Yale, where his acquaintances, including Upton Sinclair (1878-1968, The Jungle, 1906, a graphic novel of the Chicago stockyards). Sinclair Lewis, sometimes called Harry and sometimes Hal, contributed regularly to the Yale Literary Magazine and took short story classes from professors, one of whom he said, "might have been harmful if he had only been brighter".

49. Lewis, Sinclair
The first American to be awarded the nobel Prize for Literature (Harry) SinclairLewis was born in Sauk Center, Minnesota, on February 7, 1885, and educated at
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/L/lewissinclair/
Lewis, Sinclair
The first American to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature (Harry) Sinclair Lewis was born in Sauk Center, Minnesota, on February 7, 1885, and educated at Yale University. From 1907 to 1916 he was a newspaper reporter and a literary editor.
Lewis's early novels, Our Mr. Wrenn (1914), The Trail of the Hawk (1915), and Free Air (1919), were relatively undistinguished, as were some of his later ones. His first, and most important work, was Main Street, published in 1920. Main Street satirized the stupidities of small town life. The themes of the monotony, emotional frustration and lack of spiritual and intellectual values in American middle-class life would run through all of his later works. In the novels that followed Main Street he showed a keen ear for conversational crudites, a sound sense of the technical problems of making a living in the United States, a fine eye for the details of rooms and buildings that are found in America.
His novel Babbitt (1922) put a new word into the English language, a word to describe the typical go-getting salesman.Arrowsmith (1925) displayed the lack of scientific idealism somethimes found in the medical profession. Elmer Gantry (1927) lampooned an unscrupulous clergyman, and was based upon facts provided by the Rev. L.M. Birkhead. In Dodsworth (1929) Lewis depicted the egotistic, pretentious, married woman sometimes found in American upper-middle-class circles.

50. Nobel Prize For Literature, 1901-2002
nobel Prize for Literature, 19012002. Year, 1906). 1930, sinclair lewis(1885-1951), United States, Main Street (1920); Arrowsmith (1926).
http://www.hycyber.com/CLASS/nobel.html
Nobel Prize for Literature, 1901-2002
Year Author (Dates) Country Famous Work Hungary Fateless Fiasco Kaddish for a Child Not Born V. S. Naipaul Great Britain A House for Mr. Biswas Guerillas A Bend in the River Beyond Belief Half a Life Gao Xingjian China Bus Stop Fugitives Soul Mountain Germany The Tin Drum Portugal Baltasar and Blimunda Blindness Dario Fo (1926- ) Italy Non si paga! Non si paga! Wislawa Szymborska (1923- ) Poland Sounds, Feelings, Thoughts: Seventy Poems Seamus Heaney Ireland North The Haw Lantern Kenzaburo Oe Japan A Personal Matter Toni Morrison United States Beloved Derek Walcott (1930- ) St. Lucia, West India Omeros Nadine Gordimer South Africa A Guest of Honour Octavio Paz (1914-1998) Mexico The Labyrinth of Solitude Spain Journey to Alcarria Naguib Mahfouz (1911- ) Egypt Children of Gebelawi Joseph Brodsky (Iosif Alexandrovich Brodsky, 1940-1996) United States A Part of Speech Less Than One: Selected Essays Wole Soyinka (1934- ) Nigeria The Interpreters The Man Died Myth, Literature and the African World Claude-Eugene-Henri Simon (1913- ) France Les Georgiques Jaroslav Seifert (1901-1986) Czechoslovakia All the Beauty in the World William Golding (1911-1993) United Kingdom Lord of the Flies Columbia-Mexico One Hundred Years of Solitude The Autumn of the Patriarch Elias Canetti (1905-1994) Bulgaria-United Kingdom Crowds and Power Czeslaw Milosz Poland The Captive Mind Odysseus Elytis (Odysseus Alepoudhelis, 1911-1996)

51. Nobel Do 1949
lewis HARRY sinclair ur. 7 lutego 1885 r. Sauk Center (Minnesota) , zm. Wówczaslewis Harry sinclair zostal uhonorowany literacka Nagroda Nobla.
http://cku.wodzislaw.pl/pliki/nobel4.htm
LEWIS HARRY SINCLAIR - ur. 7 lutego 1885 r. Sauk Center (Minnesota) , zm. 10 stycznia 1951 r. Rzym. Powieœciopisarz i nowelista amerykañski. Pierwsz¹ ksi¹¿kê wyda³ pod pseudonimem Tom Graham w 1912 r., by³a to ksi¹¿eczka dla dzieci i nosi³a tytu³ Przeja¿d¿ka samolotem. W latach 1914-19 wyda³ piêæ powieœci, jedn¹ gorsz¹ od drugiej a by³y to: Nasz Mr. Warren; Szlakiem soko³a; Stanowisko; Niewinni i Na swobodzie. W 1920 r. wyda³ powieœæ Ulica g³ówna, która przynios³a mu s³awê nie tylko w Stanach Zjednoczonych, ale i na œwiecie. W 1922 r. ukaza³a siê kolejna powieœæ Babbitt. Jej tytu³owy bohater sta³ siê symbolem ucieleœniaj¹cym typowe cechy amerykañskiego drobnomieszczañstwa. Nastêpna powieœæ pisarza wydana w 1925 r. pt. Arrowsmith, utrzymana by³a w podobnej tonacji, lecz tym razem opêtane szaleñstwem by³o œrodowisko naukowców. Ksi¹¿kê tê uznano za najwybitniejsz¹ w dorobku pisarza i wyró¿niono j¹ rok póŸniej Nagrod¹ Pulitzera. Odmówi³ jednak przyjêcia tego wyró¿nienia, gdy¿ uwa¿a³ Arrowsmith za swój najgorszy utwór. Kolejne cztery powieœci: Mantrap; Elmer Gantry; Cz³owiek, który zna³ prezydenta Coolige’a; Samuel Dodsworth

52. Booklist Lingeman, Richard. Sinclair Lewis.
Dreiser biographer Lingeman reprises the life and work of the first Americanto win the nobel Prize in literature, sinclair lewis (1895–1951).
http://www.ala.org/booklist/v98/de2/24lingeman.html
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  • 53. Minnesota Nice! - Sauk Centre - Sinclair Lewis
    Sauk Centre sinclair lewis Home sinclair lewis was the first Americanauthor to win the nobel Prize for Literature. The nobel Prize
    http://home.sprintmail.com/~billroy/sauk_centre.html
    Sauk Centre
    Sinclair Lewis Home Sinclair Lewis was the first American author to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. The Nobel Prize was awarded in 1930 reflecting on his work in two previously critically acclaimed novels Main Street and Babbitt and was awarded for his novel Arrowsmith Main Street , was based on his life growing up in the small Minnesota prairie town of Sauk Centre. Much of what he wrote in his books was based on his life in Sauk Centre.
    Pictured below is his boyhood home on Sinclair Lewis Avenue. The house has been fully restored to the way it looked when Sinclair lived there as a small boy.
    On the edge of town, right off the Interstate 94 exit, is the Sinclair Lewis Interpretive Center. There you can find a large collection of memorabilia from Sinclair's life, including his writing desk pictured here.
    Sinclair's father was a doctor. His office was above the main street drug store. The radio pictured here is from that office as well as the window (in the left hand corner of the photo) with Dr. Lewis' name painted on it.
    This is the parlor in the Lewis home that served as the setting for the meetings of the Literary Society. In the book

    54. IPL Online Literary Criticism Collection
    sinclair lewis http//www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1930/lewisautobio.html To recount my life for the nobel Foundation, I would like to present it as
    http://www.ipl.org.ar/cgi-bin/ref/litcrit/litcrit.out.pl?au=lew-234

    55. Authhors 6
    Return To List. L. lewis, sinclair 18851951 Born in Sauk Center, Minnesotain 1885, lewis was the first American to win the nobel Prize in Literature.
    http://www.online-library.org/research/author6.shtml
    Online-Library.Org - Resources for Students, Teachers, Researchers and Writers.
    The Research Files
    Author Links Page Six
    Choose from the list below A B C D ... Z
    K Kipling, Rudyard
    Born in Bombay, India, Kipling made a significant contribution to
    English Literature; including poetry, short stories, and novels.
    In 1882, Kipling worked as a newspaper reporter and parttime writer
    in India. His later stories and poetry was helped by the experience of
    colonial life.
    Between 1887 and 1889, he published six volumee of short stories set
    in and concerning the India he so loved. 1907 brought Kipling the
    Nobel Prize in Literature for his power of observation, originality of
    imagination, and remarkable talent for narration. Return To List L Lewis, Sinclair Born in Sauk Center, Minnesota in 1885, Lewis was the first American to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.

    56. Literature/Authors/L/Lewis, Sinclair - Fractured Atlas Links Directory
    life in the 1920s. The American Fear of Literature sinclair lewis'nobel Lecture, December 12, 1930. The sinclair lewis Homepage
    http://www.fracturedatlas.org/site/links/Literature/Authors/L/Lewis__Sinclair/
    Member Login Become a Member Links to Arts-Related Websites
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    ADVERTISEMENT: Home Literature Authors L : Lewis, Sinclair CATEGORIES: Works LINKS:

    57. 'Six Feet Under' Writer Craig Wright Adapts Sinclair Lewis Novel For The Stage
    His nobel autobiography also reveals lewis' affection for the smalltown Americathat he scaldingly What Adapted by Craig Wright from sinclair lewis' novel.
    http://www.startribune.com/stories/1555/3778360.html
    news freetime travel homezone ... item world 'Six Feet Under' writer Craig Wright adapts Sinclair Lewis novel for the stage Graydon Royce, Star Tribune Published March 30, 2003 On Jan. 2, playwright Craig Wright sat down in the basement rehearsal hall of Great American History Theatre to listen as cast members read through his second draft of "Main Street." Wright, a staff writer for HBO's "Six Feet Under," was back in his hometown visiting friends so Ron Peluso, the theater's artistic director, seized the opportunity to gather his actors around a table and gauge how this adaptation of Sinclair Lewis' 1920 novel sounded to the ear. "It's about 65 pages," Wright said. "There are about 50 good ones. I'd like to find the 15 that aren't and look for ways to fix them, or throw them out. I just want you to know it isn't perfect." It had been about a year since Wright approached Peluso with the notion of finding a play within "Main Street," the most definitive Minnesota novel ever written. Lewis' masterwork prefigured cultural tussles that rage today, began to sketch the outlines of that passive/aggressive phenomenon called "Minnesota Nice" and appreciated, like only a native son could, the environmental landscape where high plains meet forest. "Main Street," though, is a sprawling, episodic novel with characters and plots that aggressively chart their own course. Wright and Peluso wondered about how to adapt it for the stage.

    58. Reader's Companion To American History - -LEWIS, SINCLAIR
    helped lewis become the first American writer to win the nobel Prize in Mark Schorer,sinclair lewis An American Life (1961); Vincent Sheean, Dorothy and Red
    http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_053000_lewissinclai.htm
    Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Contributors ... World Civilizations The Reader's Companion to American History
    LEWIS, SINCLAIR
    , novelist, satirist of middle-class values. Born in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, the son of a stern hardworking doctor, Lewis matured slowly, writing a number of minor novels and working as a publicist and editor. In 1920 he found his voice with Main Street, a devastating portrait of the American small town, its dullness, mindless prejudices, and lonely stultified women. He followed this book with Babbitt (1922), an equally vigorous assault on a typical small-town businessman and his narrow, contradictory values. Lewis was more than a critic of American culture, however. In his next novel, Arrowsmith (1925), which he wrote in collaboration with the bacteriologist Paul de Kruif, he revealed his admiration for the heroic side of the American dream. Martin Arrowsmith is a brilliant medical researcher who struggles against the temptations of irresponsible women, unethical opportunists in the medical profession, and his own human impulses, which threaten his professional integrity. The novel won the Pulitzer Prize, but Lewis created a literary sensation by rejecting it. In 1920 the Pulitzer judges had awarded the prize to Main Street

    59. The Roaring Twenties
    *. lewis, sinclair. Elmer Gantry. 1927. Gantry’s “shallow charm appeals toera’s religious zealots seeking a charismatic leader.” lewis won the nobel
    http://hswww.northville.k12.mi.us/HistoryPage/New/historypage/roaring_twenties.h
    Supplemental Reading / Media List U S History Post Reconstruction to Present The Roaring Twenties Non-fiction Allen, Frederick L. Only Yesterday: An Informal History of the 1920’s Harper and Row, 1970. ** American Heritage History of the Twenties and Thirties American Heritage, 1970. ** Baritz, Loren. The Culture of the Twenties MacMillan, 1970. *** Hughes, Langston. I Wonder as I Wonder Hill and Wang, 1964. Autobiography. ** May Ernest R. Boom and Bust Silver, Burdett and Ginn, 1974. *** Fiction Dreiser, Theodore. An American Tragedy Poor, uneducated son discovers the promises and pitfalls of instant wealth, the effects of poverty and lack of education during the Roaring Twenties. *** Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby Jazz Age portrait of the careless, purposeless lives of the rich. Hemingway, Ernest. The Sun Also Rises Scribner, 1984. Hemingway won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954. Lewis, Sinclair. Arrowsmith Poor, young doctor physician professional greed and remains a country doctor. Lewis declines the Pulitzer Prize for this novel. ** Lewis, Sinclair.

    60. LitWeb.net
    sinclair lewis won the nobel Prize for Literature in 1930, the first givento an American. His total output includes 22 novels and three plays.
    http://www.biblion.com/litweb/biogs/lewis_sinclair.html

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