Who is Sinclair Lewis? Many people think that he is the author of the 1920 's "Main Street" novel. Sinclair Lewis is also his son, husband and father. Sinclair Lewis' private life is often compared with his novels in several ways. Literary critics have complicated feelings about his work. Some people say his work is wonderful, others think that it is very bad. This is just a matter of opinion. Either way, writing is the way Sinclair Lewis pulls people into his life. Emma Kermott, who lives in Canada, has born Harry Sinclair Lewis (Kuntiz and Howard 821; Schorer 439; Louis, (Harry) Sinclair) 314) at the Minnesota Souk Center on February 7, 1885.
In particular, the main street of Sinclair Lewis is portrayed as a narrow manga in the Midwest town. And Lewis got a generous return from this portrait, actually to disappoint or to focus on the fear of the Midwest market. Lauk wrote that focusing on similar works and not paying attention to those who celebrate the real Midwest will still create feedback loops that affect our culture and literary classics . Among other things, what is lost is the potential story of a Midwestern writer who shapes norms and helps establish literary realism.
Sinclair Lewis's "Arrowsmith" in Sinclair Lewis' s novel "Arrowsmith" written in 1925 can be read in our global science lacking idealism, most commonly in the medical world (Encarta, 1). The era depicted in this book is not ideal primarily in the medical field, from the perspective of scientific progress. Our scientists can not present their own ideas, and our progress can not go anywhere, and it is very fast. Today is very fast, I only have to move and experiment, and I do not have time to late old copies and copy.
In Babbitt (1922), Sinclair Lewis created a life-like and breathless person with identifiable hope and dreams, not comics. For his publisher, Lewis wrote: "They are all 46-year old Americans, they are very excited, but they are worried." George Babbit's mediocrity It is very important for his realism Lewis believes that a fatal flaw in the literary expression of an American businessman was to describe him as a "special person".