Anthony Di Renzo makes available for the first time since their original publication some eighty years ago a collection of fifteen of Sinclair Lewis s early business stories.
Among Lewis s funniest satires, these stories introduce the characters, themes, and techniques that would evolve into "Babbitt. "Each selection reflects the commercial culture of Lewis s day, particularly Reason Why advertising, self-help manuals, and the business fiction of the "Saturday Evening Post. "The stories were published between October 1915 and May 1921 (nine in the "Saturday Evening Post, "four in "Metropolitan Magazine, "one in "Harper s Magazine, "and one in "American Magazine)."
Because some things have not changed in the American workplace since Lewis s day, these highly entertaining and unflinchingly accurate office satires will appeal to the fans of "Dilbert "and "The Drew Carey Show. "In a sense, they provide lay readers with an archaeology of white-collar angst and regimentation. The horror and absurdities of contemporary corporate downsizing already existed in the office of the Progressive Era. For an audience contemplating the death of the American middle class, Lewis s stories provide an important retrospective on earlier times and a preliminary autopsy on the American dream.
Appearing just in time to celebrate the seventy-fifth anniversary of the publication of "Babbitt, "this collection rescues Lewis s best early short fiction from obscurity, provides extensive information about his formative years in advertising and public relations, and analyzes both his genius for marketing and his carefully cultivated persona as the Great Salesman of American letters."
- ISBN10 0585201811
- ISBN13 9780585201818
- Publish Date 14 May 2014 (first published 3 November 1997)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Southern Illinois University Press
- Format eBook
- Pages 396
- Language English