Award this!
I’m not the only one who Sinclair Lewis leaves a bit cold. Here’s a rant by Ernest Hemingway from a letter to my great-grandfather*:
“It certainly is a filthy business for them to give the Nobel prize to Mr. Lewis when they could have given it to Ezra, or to the author of Ulysses. Or is it that the Nobel prize is supposed to represent the best aspects of Swedish life in America, or anywhere, and this is why they give it to Lewis? Well, I suppose we should be thankful they didn’t give it to Dr. Henry van Dyke or William Leon Phelps, both of whom I’m sure, felt that they were in line for it. Also, it eliminated the Dreiser menace, although of two bad writers Dreiser certainly deserves it a hell of a lot more than Lewis. It has occurred to me that the only difference between the Nobel prize and all other prizes is simply a matter of quantity of money and since all prizes are lousy, what’s the difference except in the extent of the sum. Although last year when they gave it to Tomas Mann, and when they gave it to Yeats, it made me damned happy.”
*My great-grandfather was an American journalist in Paris during the 1920s and 1930s, during which time he became good friends with Hemingway, Pound, and a number of other writers, I am currently working on a book about his life, using his correspondence as well as the columns he wrote for the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, which are really quite good. I will be sharing some of that material here in the future, no doubt. Hemingway, of course, won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1954. Sinclair Lewis was the first American to do so in 1930.
I’m a fan of Hemingway although I’m disturbed by what appears to be his antisemitism in Sun Also Rises.* But he can come off as a jerk.
*I can’t decide whether the antisemitism is in his approach to the novel, or simply his recreation of the characters’ attitudes. Or we can drop the “simply” and suggest it’s both and neither, along with some third thing.Report
It went both ways. Lewis, who was half a generation older than Hemingway and a bit of a prude, wrote this about him:
Mister Ernest Hemingway
Halts his slaughter of the kudu
To advise you that you may
Risk his sacerdotal hoodoo
If you go on day be day
Speaking priggishly, as you do.
Come on man, be bravely heard
Bawling that four-letter word
And wear your mind decollete
Like Mister Ernest HemingwayReport
My sci-fi Modernist fan fiction novel is going to be titled The Dreiser Menace.Report
The “Guy” in this is your great grandfather? How friggin’ cool is that!Report
I really like that story, especially the way Hemingway ends it.Report
Me too, but I’m a fan of his short stories. I’ve always thought he wrote 2, maybe 3 good novels, including one great one, and wrote a host of great short stories.
Guy, er Rufus’ great grandpa, has a great line in that one:
“That’s a young man that will go a long way in Italy,” I said to Guy.
“Well,” said Guy, “he went twenty kilometers with us.Report
Yep! Same one. He was apparently none too thrilled about Hemingway using his name because he got pestered about the story after it came out. Our family actually has a picture of the two of them in an Italian restaurant from that trip, which I will post if I can find out.Report
Again, friggin’ awesome.Report
Thanks, I agree. I’ve been talking for a while about putting together a compilation of Guy Hickok’s newspaper articles because he was really a very entertaining and compelling writer and he wrote about things like going to bullfights with Hemingway and having tea with Emma Goldman. Finally, my academic mentor told me she thought I should just write a book about him and have that be my next project. So, I’m working on sort of a “collaborative” history with his columns telling half the story and my research and narration tying it together. Hopefully, this will not just result in me looking like a lousy writer by comparison!Report
Put me down for a copy when it’s done.Report
Me too. Autographed, of course.Report
That’s awesome.
(Obligatory: “You know who else got a Nobel Prize?”)Report
I know. The most ridiculous one ever, and it had to go to an American.
You meant Pearl S. Buck, right?Report
LEAVE PEARL S BUCK ALONEReport
I feel better for not having ever managed to trudge my way through more than one Sinclair Lewis novel. I always felt a bit bad about that, but perhaps it wasn’t just my own shortcomings at play.Report
He’s a terrible plotter. He tends to say the same things over and over, and even a book that’s as fun and energetic as Elmer Gantry would benefit from cutting out some of the repetitive episodes. And his characters tends to be at best two-dimensional. So the Nobel Prize was crazy. Lewis can’t be mentioned in the same breath as Faulkner or Hemingway, because he’s only about fifty times better as a novelist than Ayn Rand.Report
If Rand had figured out how to create two-dimensional characters they would have been twice as good.Report
Lewis is one of those show-your-work kind of writers. He did a massive amount of research for his books, which is great, but then he has to put a lot of it in the foreground, which can get really tedious. Zola coulld be the same way at times. Actually, it reminds me of something my father said after he read American Pastoral: “It was pretty good, but boy I didn’t need to know so much about how gloves are made!”Report
And how did your dad feel about Moby Dick? 😉Report
Of any of Tom Wolfe’s novels?Report
I should ask him about Moby Dick. He’s a lobsterman and a bunch of family members on his mother’s side were whalers or sailors, so he generally loves books about being at sea. He won’t watch The Perfect Storm however because it hits a bit too close to home.Report
I couldn’t make it through Elmer Gantry, and Main Street was pretty blah (with good parts). I did like Babbitt, although it suffers from what other people have said characterizes it.Report
The movie of Elmer Gantry is one of the classic examples of “better than the book”, and it’s because it stuck to the damned story. (OK, Jean Simmons and Burt Lancaster didn’t hurt either.)Report