Reproduction of the original. The publishing house Megali specialises in reproducing historical works in large print to make reading easier for people with impaired vision.
Sinclair Lewis decided to paint a picture of the difference between small town life, and urban sophistication by telling the story of a young educated city woman who marries a doctor and moves to a small town. Lewis was really just going to make a simple story about class differences and the isolation between folks, and throwing in some of his own experiences from growing up in small town Minnesota. What he ended up with was a brilliant book that when first published in the early 20's struck a huge chord with the American public and became a huge seller and cultural phenomenon. Carol Kennicott moves to fictional 'Gopher Prairie' in hopes of changing the town to a place of great city-sophistication that she can revel in. Her mind is set on changing the townsfolk and its inhabitants ways which she finds aloof and backward. Without giving away too much of the plot (which others I am sure here have already discussed), she runs into townsfolk who share her idea, and many who are suspicious of her motives. What Lewis shows in great passage and scenery (you can literally touch and feel every blade of prairie grass he describes) is that even though Carol's ambitions seem great, (particularly when confronting all the clique like prejudices that pervade the small town), her methods come off as pretty high-falouting and preposterous based on a great deal of misunderstanding. Nobody in the novel has the right method on how people should live, but somehow everyone manages to live within their own personal bubble. You want to cheer Carol on (or wait hoping she will fall on her face if you feel that way), but you at least understand and realize the mindset that plagues people who want to come in to your life-home-family-town can be an almost impossible barrier. The novel is unbelievably timeless. Reading this now I couldn't believe how the similar parallel issues that exist in this story are still relevant right now. Issues of Blue State vs. Red State, and how America right now is so divided speak volumes about how much this book is so on target even after several decades after its initial publication. This book is without question a snapshot of America, there are many "Gopher Prairies" and "Carol Kennicots" (and all the other townspeople who you have met at some point) out there, and that is the absolute brilliance of this book. And of course the book has an American setting, but the conflicts that happen in this book could be happening anywhere in the world in any country. The small town vs. big city fight is universal. This is the greatest American novel I have ever read thus far bar none.
Excellent and Well Told Story
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Carol is a girl with big dreams. When she marries Kennicott, she moves from the Twin Cities where she has supported herself, to rural life in Gopher Prairie, Minnesota, where it is her dream to transform the sleepy town into something better. The ups and downs of Carrie Kennicott's life were felt by each member of our Family Book Club. Just when it seems things can't get any worse for Carrie, they can -- but sometimes they get better.This book has been subject to a lot of literary criticism. Surely, the story can be studied in many ways at many levels. However, one does not need to have a master's in English in order to get a lot of enjoyment out of Main Street.Set in the 1920s, Carrie's story -- her feelings, the changes she tries to make to Gopher Prairie, and all of the people she meets there -- could easily be told today with only minor changes. And, although this book is overall rather depressing in nature, there were quite a few places that it had me laughing out loud.Main Street really captures the aura of small town America, especially middle Minnesota. The real life Gopher Prairie is Sauk Centre, Minnesota. It's an interesting place to visit, as the main street there has now been renamed Sinclair Lewis Boulevard.
Achingly true, even more so today
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
I grew up in a small town in Iowa, and this book captures so well the experience of small towns, whether they be in Iowa or Angola. The frustrations and triumphs of Carol are universal and unending, and perhaps even more timely today than they were when this book was first published. "Main Street" is not so much about a woman in a repressive patriarchal society as it is about any independent spirit trapped by circumstance in a well-meaning but banal social structure composed of individuals too bound by convention to breathe free. This is a gently told cautionary tale that should be on every reading list in every high school in the nation.
Fantastic
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
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 Carol's 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 wife's death) Made desperate by the seeming ineffectuality of her reform efforts, and these fears of decline into a town matron, Carol runs off to Washington D.C. for a period, before returning half broken to Gopher Prairie, tractable while still picturing herself as a maverick.A five star review does not preclude qualms over a piece of literature. Main Street is truly a marvelous book, but there are flaws. Irony peppered moderately in a story can lend life and humor; too much can overwhelm the reader with a sense that the author has no other crutch than easy, predictable amusement. Also, this being an episodic novel, there sometimes seems to be little tying the book together save for the overpowering contagion of yearning for excitement, reform, and freedom that leaves Carol and others in Gopher Prairie so disappointed. These should not be deterent enough to suggest you steer clear of Main Street, though. As with every marred but overall fantastic booke light breaks the dark for the reader willing to overlook flaws that, were he or she writing the novel, he or she couldn't have ironed out. As glorious a work of literature as it is an historical do
A Great Study of Americana
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
My first Sinclair Lewis book: I'm impressed. The character of Carol is just outstanding. She's a heroine with whom you're irritated just as often as you're admiring of her. A 3-D woman, what a treat! I like how her "idealism" and "culture" are at times embraced and just as often rejected, because I think she functions as a mirror for the reader. How often do you and I try to "change" those around us? How often do they truly need it? How often are we blind to what needs to be changed about us, even as we set out to "improve" everyone? It's partly a satire of the two characteristics of our pioneering American life: we have to conquer and remake everything over in our own image, and yet we resist those efforts coming from anyone or anywhere else. What group of people doesn't? It's less the small-town mentality as the mentality of people who have banded together and enjoy their life because of its homogeneity and safety. It's not only socioeconomic issues that keep minorities, the middle class, and the well-to-do in their own neighborhoods, it's the common bond between you and your neighbors: in you, I see myself. This book is just a great effort to make us see ourselves; whether or not we change seems to concern Lewis less than whether or not we're aware of our idiosyncrasies.
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