- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Posts
1928 The Bridge of San Luis Rey
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
1928 The Bridge of San Luis Rey Thorton Wilder 235 pages Summary Part One: Brother Juniper, an earnest friar in Lima, Peru, recounts an accident in which the ropes of an ancient Incan bridge break one day for no apparent reason, sending five people to their deaths. He scientifically investigates the lives of the victims, to determine whether the tragic failure of the bridge was part of God's Plan. Part Two: A Marquesa foolishly dotes upon her daughter Clara, a girl who is cruelly indifferent to her mother. Once Clara has married brilliantly and moves to Spain, the Marquesa takes a companion, Pepita. Pepita is an orphan raised and mentored by the Abbess in a nearby convent. From Pepita's humble example, the Marquesa learns what it means to live bravely. She and Pepita are both killed in the bridge collapse. Part Three: Orphaned twin brothers, Manuel and Esteban, are also raised by the Abbess. The twins are preternaturally close, until Manuel falls in love with a cab...
1927 Early Autumn
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
1927 Early Autumn Louis Bromfield 339 pages Summary The Pentlands, a snobby Massachusetts family, persist in their WASPy ways even as neighboring families die out and are replaced by nouveau riche social climbers. Pentland Manor is ruled by the ferociously etiquette-bound Aunt Cassie. Cassie runs the house in place of her sister-in-law, who is mysteriously housed in one wing of the grand house with a debilitating mental illness and a nurse to tend her. Cassie's brother, John, is the titular head of the family, but he spends his days playing bridge with a female friend of his wife. John's son Anson, the up-and-coming heir of the family, has married a lowly Scots-Irish girl named Olivia, much to the family's grave disappointment. The mismatched couple has one son who is always ill. A breath of fresh air arrives in the form of the Pentland daughter, Sybil, who is returning from school in Paris. A cousin Sabine, also lately from Europe, joins the family. These two free-thi...
1926 Arrowsmith
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
1926 Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis 456 pages Summary This winner is famous--and infamous--for many reasons. First, the book occupies a special place in Pulitzer history because Sinclair Lewis was the first author to decline the Pulitzer. He wrote a lengthy letter to the committee explaining his reservations. After not receiving the prize for his previous novels, Main Street and Babbit , Lewis objected to the idea of literary awards that single out one work over others. He is not alone in thinking that his earlier novels were the real basis for the 1926 award. Second, Lewis both accurately describes the state of 1920s medicine, and predicts the future fault lines of the industry. Public Health Reports (2001) said this novel predicted, among other things, that research goals would diverge from clinicians' aims, and that pharmaceutical companies would begin to stress profits over scientific research. Lewis worked so closely with science writer...
1925 So Big
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
1925 So Big by Edna Ferber 230 pages Summary Selina Peake De Jong is an artistic young lady raised by a high-living but itinerant father in various hotels of Chicago. When he suddenly dies, she is left penniless. She decides to teach school in the Dutch-settled community of South Holland. She marries an immigrant onion farmer, and soon finds herself widowed with a young son. She decides to run her husband’s onion farm herself in order to support her son. This involves hard work in the fields, regular trips to the produce markets of Chicago, and dealing with produce buyers as a woman in a man’s world. After watching his mother scrape out a living and sacrifice for his well-being, Dirk grows up wanting to be rich. He attends college, becomes an architect, and then a stockbroker. His mother worries that despite his success, Dirk has no joy in his life. When Dirk falls in loves with a sculptor, he must grapple with the lessons his mother tried to teach him, about making space for be...
1924 The Able McLaughlins
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
1924 The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson 262 pages Summary This book is virtually forgotten today, probably for three reasons. First, the author uses Scottish dialect for dialogue, which makes for slow reading. Second, the plot revolves around the rape of a young woman, but the word “rape” is never used anywhere in the book. Third, following the rape, the author’s focus lies not on the woman’s reaction, but on how the man in her life will cope with the terrible aftermath. However, the book was praised in its day for its folkloric detail. Christie McNair is part of a strict Scots Covenanters community in Iowa. She is engaged to Wully, and her cousin Peter is the town low-life. After Wully leaves to fight in the Civil War, Peter rapes Christie. Christie is pregnant when Wully returns from war. The focus of the novel is how Wully will deal with Peter and how Wully's life is now changed. Wully chases Peter out of town. He is committed to marrying Christie, but in doing ...
1923 One of Ours
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
1923 One of Ours by Willa Cather 459 pages Summary Cather was skewered by Sinclair Lewis and Ernest Hemingway for including romantic conventions in a novel set in World War I. However, one unique strength of this book is Cather's (heretical) opinion that the European war was a freeing experience for some Americans; it was not just an unrelenting horror. I personally find Cather's writing to be uneven. She insists on writing from the male perspective--and doesn't do so convincingly. But she is correct in observing that World War I (as costly as it was to the nation and to individuals) did help Americans see beyond their own borders. In this novel, a young man from a Nebraska farm, Claude Wheeler, is sent to a Christian college by his parents. There he befriends a fun-loving, free-thinking family, the Ehrlichs. He is called home to help with the family farm, and marries a childhood friend. His wife values Christian and political work over th...