![]() ![]() ![]() He looked at the institutions that tyrannically ruled American life-the Family, the Protestant Church, Business Interests, Good Fellowship-and made his readers understand that their ascendance was arbitrary and to a large degree baneful." Hudson Review Spring 2003. "Sinclair Lewis: The bard of discontents." Says Allen, "Sinclair Lewis, like his literary idols Shaw, Wells, and Ibsen, was one of the world's great intellectual liberators. "Sinclair Lewis." An introduction to Sinclair Lewis. "The Romance of Sinclair Lewis." Novelist Gore Vidal on Sinclair Lewis. "All-American Iconoclast." A brief article by novelist Jane Smiley on Lewis and the new Lewis biography by Richard Lingeman, in the NY Times 20 Jan. ![]() "Autobiography." From the Nobel Prize web page for Sinclair Lewis, the first American to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature, in 1930. Main page | 20th-century literature | 20th-century fiction | about "Everything that is worth while in the world has been accomplished by the free, inquiring, critical spirit" - Sinclair LewisĪ selective list of online literary criticism for the twentieth-century American novelist and short story writer Sinclair Lewis, favoring signed articles by recognized scholars and articles published in peer-reviewed sources Sinclair Lewis photo Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951) ![]()
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