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Silly Babbitt.("Sinclair Lewis: Rebel from Main Street")

National Review

| March 11, 2002 | TEACHOUT, TERRY | COPYRIGHT 2002 National Review, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Sinclair Lewis: Rebel from Main Street, by Richard Lingeman (Random House, 656 pp., $35)

The best way to jump-start a novelist's reputation -- or to kill it -- is to write his biography. Forty-one years ago, Mark Schorer performed the latter act upon the sodden corpse of Sinclair Lewis by publishing an 867-page autopsy report. Elegantly written but seemingly endless, Sinclair Lewis: An American Life was the first of the big-time blockbuster pathographies, the story of an unlikable alcoholic who somehow contrived to produce Main Street and Elmer Gantry in between benders. Unlike most of its offspring, it was reasonably sympathetic -- but not to Lewis's work, for which Schorer had little use, calling him "one of the worst writers in modern American literature."

Richard Lingeman, by contrast, comes not to bury Lewis but to exhume him; and his agenda, as befits a senior editor of The Nation, is not even slightly hidden:

Schorer's biography was a product of its time, the time of the silent 1950s, the era of the anticommunist culture war in academe, the heyday of the New Critics, who placed text above social context. In more recent years, scholars have succeeded in viewing Lewis's books through different critical lenses, with the result that his works have come back into repute.

Had this predigested snippet of conventional academic wisdom been placed at the beginning of Sinclair Lewis: Rebel from Main Street instead of the end, I wouldn't have bothered to read the rest of the book, especially since my previous encounter with the author's prose style, his numbingly pedestrian two-volume biography of Theodore Dreiser, didn't exactly whet my appetite for his thoughts on the life and work of Sinclair Lewis. Fortunately, though, Lingeman has learned to play a better game than he talks. While I'm far from certain that Lewis needed a new biography, this one has the virtue of being 200 pages shorter than Schorer is, and it is dully but decently written. What's more, Lingeman mainly sticks to matters of fact, saving most of the sermonizing for a brief, fatuous epilogue that the unsympathetic reader may skip with a clear conscience: "His iconoclasm chimed with America's coming of age after World War I, but he wrote with a real moral passion. He really cared." (Italics in the original, believe it or not.)

If you don't know anything about Lewis's life, rest assured that the facts are all here, and as depressing as ever. A small-town boy who longed for the rich, full life, he made a pile writing uplifting short stories for the Saturday Evening Post, then bit the hand that fed him with Main Street, a novel about the spiritual poverty of small-town life that wowed the high-minded middlebrows and brought him even more money (nothing succeeds like self-hatred). He was the first American novelist to win a Nobel Prize, no doubt because he told Europe exactly what it wanted to hear -- that America was full of boobs and boors. He married a social climber, whom he left for a bisexual newspaper columnist, after which he took up with an 18-year-old actress; unable to cope with the rigors of celebrity, he anesthetized himself with alcohol, which made him noisy and garrulous, and increasingly friendless. He died in Italy in 1951, having long outlived his talent, and the obituaries were cruel, dismissing him as a ham-fisted satirist whose once-celebrated novels were now faded period pieces.

Was there really more to Sinclair Lewis than that? As Lingeman reminds us, H. L. Mencken, Virginia Woolf, Rebecca West, and Edith Wharton (to whom Babbitt is dedicated) all thought so. Mencken described Main Street as "well written, and full of a sharp ...

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Source: HighBeam Research, Silly Babbitt.("Sinclair Lewis: Rebel from Main Street")

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