Sister Carrie (Signet Classics)

by Theodore Dreiser
Sister Carrie (Signet Classics)
published
2000 (first published 1900) by Signet Classics
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binding
Paperback, 512 pages

isbn
0451527607   (isbn13: 9780451527608)

description
Sister Carrie, Theodore Dreiser's revolutionary first novel, was published in 1900--sort of. The story of Carrie Meeber, an 18-year-old country...more





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Harvey the Chainsaw
bookshelves: hamlinerequiredreading
Read in March, 2007
Seminal American literature, and yet the simplest occurrence in Sister Carrie -- such as Carrie requesting meat -- reads like this:

He caught himself looking at her smiling and she was the very picture of youth and uprightness and the tendency toward productivity and mirth and joviality, all of which were produced from her in a very feminine manner. Yet thoughts dashed inside his mind in a very tumultuous fashion, tumultuous like the threshings of torrents. Carrie has not asked for meat befor...more
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Willa
03/06/08

bookshelves: 1001
Read in February, 2008
I read this book for my book club, and it's definitely one I would not have read otherwise. But, I'm very glad I read it. It's not one of the greatest books I've read and I didn't like any of the characters, but it was well-written, for the most part, and - I've learned - had a huge influence on American literature.

The themes are timeless and it's sad to see how little our society has changed in the last century-plus. Our priorities (as a whole) are just as out-of-whack now as they were the...more
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Cris
07/12/07

bookshelves: doctoral_comp-exam_texts, naturalism
Read in May, 2007
recommends it for: modernists and naturalists.
Sister Carrie conflicts me. As an English Major, I feel required to like it. To be sure, it does have its interesting moments and merits. On the other hand, I am just not fully satisfied with this book. Perhaps it is because this was the first of Dreiser's novels, and it is, therefore, a bit underdeveloped in some places and overdeveloped (needlessly) in others, I am a bit apprehensive. It is also quite possible that Sister Carrie is not, simply, "my cup of tea."

W...more
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Jonathan
bookshelves: assigned-by-shane, great-american-novels
Read in September, 2008
recommended to Jonathan by: Shane Avery
In the words of Edmund Wilson, "Dreiser commands our respect; but the truth is he writes so badly that it is almost impossible to read him."

Sister Carrie is a bad book. Not morally bad, unfortunately. That at least would make it interesting. In that respect, nothing in this book would be out of place in a Progressive lecture on social purity. This line from the first page sets the tone: "When a girl leaves her home at eighteen, she does one of two things. Either sh...more
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kristin
Has a copy to sell/swap
This is a classic that I could read over and over again. What a story! If you haven't read it, you should! The story not only captures the reader into the story, it gives you a deep sense of mans crazy nature.

I just finished reading this one again. I first read it 7 years ago, and felt is was time to try it again. Dreiser really speaks to my soul!!

"Oh Carrie, Carrie! Oh blind strivings of the human heart! Onward onward, it saith, and where beauty leads, there it follows. W...more
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A.C.
07/11/08

Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: anyone who likes henry james or turn of the century american lit.
Really, I don't have a lot to say about this book. I know that is disappointing and all for everyone involved, but the book is pretty self-explanatory. Girl comes to big city, finds out it isn't what it's cracked up to be. But, Dreiser really takes this book out of the frame, showing a liberated female, something that was unusual for the time. As well, the psychological aspects of the book are very engaging and the ending is all too real; Dreiser didn't opt for the happy ending, and I love him f...more
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Sarah
06/05/08

bookshelves: released
Read in June, 2008
Sister Carrie is a deceptively good book. It starts out looking like a simple morality play about the evils of the big city but Carrie is no innocent girl from the country. Apparently Carrie's willingness to use people to better herself without any thought of the consequences caused quite a scandal in its day (1900) and the original manuscript had to be toned down before it could even be published. The 1927 edition I read most certainly was the edited version but it was still modern, crass and e...more
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Jocelyn
Read in January, 2008
OK, this is an old book, a "classic" many people were forced to read in high school or college. I picked it up when I was home visiting my parents. I don't know why I love Victorian novels so much. Characters, their intentions and their actions are explained TO DEATH and it can feel very claustrophobic to read them sometimes. There's not a ton that's left open to interpretation. In this novel. Dreiser tells you exactly what kind of person Carrie is—emotionally intelligent—and exact...more
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Lisa
05/09/08

Read in January, 1998
I appreciated Sister Carrie for its searing portrait of a young woman whose innocence and self-worth is ravished by the realities of the urban environment.
I think the saddest aspect of the story is that success for a woman in cities like Chicago and New York is inevitably intertwined with sin and moral decay. Carrie achieves the glamorous lifestyle that she coveted from afar only to learn that her dream is not worth aspiring towards, as it leaves her calloused, inured and empty. On a lesser ...more
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Jeff
10/11/07

Read in September, 2007
Controversial at time of publication for its portrayal of a "fallen" woman who doesn't meet a horrible fate, the eponymous heroine Carrie doesn't put much stock in conventional sexual mores as she climbs the social ladder in 19th century America. She moves from a non-descript midwestern town to Chicago in order to make it big and stays with her sister and brother-in-law, working menial jobs until she hooks up with a salesman from the city who supports her and introduces her to the the...more
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Cory
07/08/08

bookshelves: novels
Has a copy to sell/swap
recommends it for: people of all ages! There is a fun character for everyone here!
"Poor Sister Carrie!"

That line makes me laugh. Because what Carrie's sister doesn't know is that Carrie will be quite fine on her own. Or by mooching off different men. Or whatever. Regardless, there's no reason to feel sorry for the girl!

I was really shocked at how much I enjoyed this novel. I'm not completely anti-period pieces, so I'm sure that's half the battle. Drieser does a great job with his descriptions and with Carrie's spunk and all the interesting turns of ev...more
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Clif
03/07/08

Read in March, 2008
Published in 1900, this book is credited with having an impact on the course of American literature. Dreiser's sparse style depicts the realities of everyday city life (Chicago and New York) at the turn of the 19th Century in a way that seems to hide nothing. It thus allows the reader to feel that they can see the characters as they really are. The novel does not judge the behavior of the characters in the story. But rather it simply lays out the story of their actions for the reader to pond...more
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Cat
Cat rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
08/22/07

bookshelves: 20thcenturyamericanliterature
Read in November, 2003

I would recommend this book to people interested in the concept of the city. Although its notoriety stems from its "naturalistic" depiction of the characters, I thought it was the depcition of the urban environment of Chicago and New York which stood out.

While the intertwined fates of Carrie, Drouet and Hurstwood occupy the foreground of this book, I found myself consistently drawn to the back ground.

Since Dreiser came up as a newspaperman, this makes a certain amount of sens...more
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Miranda
Read in September, 2008
Theodore Dreiser and Emile Zola are both in the naturalist camps of literature, and indeed, I found many similarities between Sister Carrie and Nana. The major difference however, is that Dreiser choses to lead Hurstwood, his formerly affluent male protagonist to a bitter, self-induced end in a flophouse (reminiscent of Edith Wharton's House of Mirth), while Carrie, a lowerclass woman who, it could be argued, does bad things for money and material gain, moves up the socio-econimic ladder to a po...more
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Ann
06/22/08

Read in June, 2008
This book was written in 1901. Dreiser obtained a publishing contract, however, the book was never distributed because the wife of the publisher read it and objected to its scandalous content. Sister Carrie lives with two men without the benefit of marriage, which was the objection. It didn't see the light of day for another fifteen years.

The theme of the book is that happiness, security, and peace cannot be obtained through depending on and seeking after conventional trappings of "beau...more
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Katherine
bookshelves: underrated
An experimental and challenging turn-of-the-century novel, featuring a woman who lives the Wages of Sin lifestyle and never pays for it; rather, she and her lovers rise and fall in society at the whims of economics. As you can imagine, this book occupies a pretty high rank on the "Most Banned" list. Engaging, relevant and intelligent.

On an academic note, it's very interesting to see how novels could look, sound, and move back before the standards for quality fiction had been establ...more
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Kathy
09/17/07

Read in January, 2000
recommends it for: everyone
Theodore Dreiser is one of my favorite authors and Sister Carrie is his best book. So many reasons to love it. Every character in the story is so well defined -- you love and hate them all at the same time. What sticks with me about this book is how Hurstwood sinks into such a decline -- watching him crumble apart in front of your eyes and seeing him basically throw his hands up helplessly, like he can do nothing to stop it. You start to hate him for it -- much like I started to hate my ex-h...more
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Jen
12/18/07

bookshelves: classics
I was looking around my room last night, and I saw Sister Carrie. I think the memories are almost more important than the book. If you go into my parents' living room, there are two floor to ceiling bookshelves. Filled with books that I would take to my room to read, convinced I was being naughty to touch the "good books." One of these was Sister Carrie. Looking back, maybe I shouldn't have been trying to read this at 10 and at 11 and at 12...but by 14 it was mine! Some books just...more
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Friend the Girl
Read in May, 2004
recommends it for: girls becoming women
Sister Carrie came to me at the right time. I was on a kick that involved buying literary classics cheap (thank you, Bantam Books!) and then devouring them because modern literature just wasn't good enough. I read Sister Carrie while struggling through a relationship where I was doing all of the work, and Carrie's plight mirrored my own. When the man who "saved" you starts pulling you under with his tight grip around your neck, do you let him go and save yourself, or do y...more
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Carrie
07/12/07

Read in April, 2007
recommends it for: no one
Although good for the first 200 pages, Dreiser should have stopped while he was ahead. This book is incredibly and unnecessarily lengthy, dragging on and on until the reader wonders why Carrie didn't just submit to a tragic, suicidal death long ago, like her other heroines of her time. I know Dreiser was trying to make a point, but by the time I got to the end at page 600-something (and over a year after picking up the book)... I had quite forgotten what it was. I'm really glad I didn't waste ti...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.61 (1740 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.49 (101 ratings)
number of reviews: 203