Showing posts with label dreiser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dreiser. Show all posts

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Sister Carrie



Sister Carrie
by Theodore Dreiser
read: circa 2001
Modern Library #33, Guardian 1000 Novels

Another book I read for that college English class and don't remember.  Professor Doody (really his name) said of Dreiser, "He was not a good writer.  I expect there are several of you, maybe even half of you, in this class who are better writers."  Then, almost as afterthought, "But Sister Carrie is a good book."

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

An American Tragedy



An American Tragedy
by Theodore Dreiser
read: 2010
Time 100 NovelsModern Library #16, Guardian 1000 Novels

Reading The Executioner's Song, it was hard not to think back to reading An American Tragedy.  Both books feature central characters who are shaped by society and their own personal flaws and end up committing crimes, are tried and sentenced to death, and show their greatest strength of character while sitting on death row.  An American Tragedy is fiction, though it is partially based on a real-life 1906 murder.  Dreiser pulls more punches than Mailer, but it's still a gripping story, and when Clyde Griffiths begins having evil thoughts it's pretty shocking.

I had never even heard of Theodore Dreiser until going off to college.  At the time he was considered one of the giants of the era, but he was just a midwestern dude writing novels, which isn't as sexy as imagining Fitzgerald and Hemingway gallivanting around Europe with all the other writers and artists.  His prose style is a bit dated, but he gets to the core of some complex feelings in An American Tragedy.