Abstract

The Prodigal Lewis

Kronenberger, Louis | January 22, 1938 issue

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The article discusses books and authors. During the 1920's author Sinclair Lewis was surely our most significant writer of fiction; today he is the author of "The Prodigal Parents." Whether he wrote this unfortunate book because he was naive or because he was canny, one is not prepared to decide; but it should as much restore him to favor with a class of people he once disconcerted as "Reflections on the French Revolution," resorted British statesman and writer Edmund Burke. This class of people are commonly called Babbitts.

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LITERATURE; AUTHORS; LEWIS, Sinclair; FICTION; AUTHORSHIP; BOOKS
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