The Age of Innocence
discussion
1920s Pulitzers -- why are they so bad?
date
newest »




That said, check in again after you read Scarlet Sister Mary. It is the low point of the Pulitzers, even had its own controversy over its choice. An ideologically difficult read...
But Pulitzer choices are perplexing. Otherwise we would be reading Fitzgerald, Lewis, and their like.


Arrowsmith, Age of Innocence, Alice Adams and So Big are sort of big, important novels....

But that does not explain why only the first two you mention persisted as books that are read today. And others from the 20s are pretty dismal.
Why are Alice Adams a So Big "sort of big, important novels"?

I've never heard of any of the other novels mentioned (not to imply anything about them).


I have not read most of the others so I am not at liberty to say. I have never read the Magnificent Ambersons, but thought the movie one of the best of American cinematic history. Joseph Cotten`s soliloquoy at the dinner table with his love object and her jerky son alone was nothing less than stupenduous.




Sinclair Lewis struck gold once, and almost twice with his books. One of my favorite stories is about how he wrote a letter to Edith Wharton congratulating her on winning the pulitzer, despite that meaning that Main Street would lose. Lewis, Cather, and Wharton had a good decade during that time, the books are very strong in content. I would wager the list is better top to bottom than the list of books that won the putlizer in the '30s.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
So Big (other topics)
The Age of Innocence (other topics)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Magnificent Ambersons (other topics)So Big (other topics)
The Age of Innocence (other topics)
What gives with this?