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"A finely significant novel written with deep understanding of the facts and with a spiritual insight that does not flag even for a moment as it throws light into the dark corners of human na-ture"--"Boston" "Evening Transcript "(1918). A naturalist novel writ-ten in the tradition of Theodore Dreiser and Upton Sinclair, "Salt "has interesting and provocative things to say about the educa-tion of American upper-middle-class males and about the power of sex to overcome a man's deep distaste for a woman's personality. As a "criticism of life" the novel today seems simply the herald of a day when…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"A finely significant novel written with deep understanding of the facts and with a spiritual insight that does not flag even for a moment as it throws light into the dark corners of human na-ture"--"Boston" "Evening Transcript "(1918). A naturalist novel writ-ten in the tradition of Theodore Dreiser and Upton Sinclair, "Salt "has interesting and provocative things to say about the educa-tion of American upper-middle-class males and about the power of sex to overcome a man's deep distaste for a woman's personality. As a "criticism of life" the novel today seems simply the herald of a day when loud voices are less noted because all voices are loud. Today its vivid characterizations are its primary inter-est. Lester Adams, Griffith's alcoholic half-brother, whose days and nights are mired in an unchanging routine of newspapers and whiskey, manages to preserve a semblance of heart and an odd little spark of integrity. F. Scott Fitzgerald considered Les-ter, along with George Hurstwood and Tom Buchanan, the three best characters in contemporary American fiction. Griffith's paramour, Clarisse Rumsey, is cheap, lazy, and pre-tentious; she is dull and almost illiterate; she is absurdly affected, but she has two qualities that enchain her reluctant lover: her obvious passion for him and her skill at dancing. As Auchincloss points out in the Afterword, "Today, her dancing would belove-making, but before 1914 a girl who tried to be respectable would endeavor to put the latter off at least until she had hooked her man." Griffith and Clarisse are married and Clarisse bears him a son then dies of a pulmonary embolism as Norris manipulates the plot to redeem Griffith and to denounce the American boarding school and university.
This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.
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