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Fuego otoñal (1929)

por Sinclair Lewis

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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6051338,980 (3.78)58
Meet Sam Dodsworth, an amiable fifty-year-old millionaire and "American Captain of Industry, believing in the Republican Party, high tariffs and, so long as they did not annoy him personally, in Prohibition and the Episcopal Church." Dodsworth runs an auto manufacturing firm, but his beautiful wife, Fran, obsessed with the notion that she is growing old, persuades him to sell his interest in the company and take her to Europe. He agrees for the sake of their marriage, but before long, the pretensions of the cosmopolitan scene prove more enticing to Fran than her husband. Both a devastating, surprisingly contemporary portrait of a marriage falling apart and a grand tour of the Europe of a bygone era, Dodsworth is stamped with Sinclair Lewis's signature satire, wickedly observant of America's foibles and great fun.… (más)
  1. 00
    The Chateau por William Maxwell (bluepiano)
    bluepiano: I dote on Dodsworth but nonetheless it is to The Chateau as a made-for-TV movie is to whatever respectable literary work it might have been based upon.
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» Ver también 58 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 13 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
drawn out and repetitive interspersed with some wit and a tortured attempt at some type of class analysis. ( )
  galuf84 | Jul 27, 2022 |
Reading "Dodsworth" was like reading a script for a 1940s romantic comedy movie. It features an American couple who are living the American dream. Mr. Dodsworth is an entrepreneur and owns a successful business. Mrs. Dodsworth is a stay-at-home mom and raised 2 lovely children who are now grown and out of the house. She dedicates her time to social activities with the other upper-class women of her neighborhood. As the Dodsworth’s reach a peak of wealth and guaranteed security, Mr. Dodsworth, at 50 years of age, decides to sell his business and they joyfully contemplate dedicating the rest of their lives to travel and leisure. Sounds good, right? Guess again….

As Mr. and Mrs. Dodsworth embark on an open-ended European trip, Sam Dodsworth discovers his wife is a social climbing, opportunist, trying to ingratiate herself with every one she meets that may raise her on the scale of social standing. This string of acquaintances includes titled Englishmen, high-ranking military men, rich dowagers, and sophisticated aristocratic bachelors. Poor Mr. Dodsworth. He is just an all-American average guy. A beer drinking, avid sports fan, with his down-home buddies, somewhat vulgar slang riddled vocabulary, and unpretentious manners.

As the Dodsworth’s travel abroad, Mr. Dodsworth enters a whole different world than Sam is accustomed to. He is being humiliated for his lack of sophistication, and played for a fool by his wife’s reckless behavior, and he doesn’t quite know how to handle the situation. You see, Mrs. Dodsworth makes it clear she is done playing the subservient wife, and from this time forward all she wants is to “live a life of style” - at any cost. She has no intention of ever going back to her old life in America.

It’s a timeless story, cleverly written. Funny. Entertaining. It is enjoyable to detest the pretentious, narcissistic Fran Dodsworth, and chuckle at her delusional attempts to gain social status, and even more fun to root for poor Sam Dodsworth to hopefully find a happy ending.

Written in 1929 - it was not the finest or most popular of Sinclair Lewis’s books. However, he did win the Nobel Prize for Literature one year later in 1930.

Rated 4 Stars April 2021 ( )
  LadyLo | Aug 13, 2021 |
No one quite captures the banality and upwardly mobile social consciousness of Americans like Lewis. ( )
1 vota rabbit-stew | Mar 29, 2019 |
Dodsworth is generally viewed as focussing on differences between American and European culture, intellect, manners, and morals. But it depicts the long, slow collapse of a seemingly solid marriage between two accomplished and loving individuals.

The surface story is straightforward. Sam Dodsworth has sold his auto manufacturing business to a larger rival. He daughter has married, his son is settled in at Yale. His wife pursuades him to take her on a long, unhurried tour of Europe. And it'll be all about her, even if he doesn't immediately grasp that. In fact, he suppresses any such notion. After all, she's his wife, and she adores him.

Sam is treated more like an indulgent father than an adored husband. It's his money that pays for the two-bedroom hotel suites Fran requires, the lavish shopping excursions she goes on, the meals and entertainments for the two of them plus the friends she makes. Though most of her 41 years have been spent in Zenith, she is convinced she understands European manners and mores. And Sam is, well, something of an embarrassment. He's a lovely man and means well, but he's uncultured and just doesn't, you know, get it.

Fairly early on, Fran's ceaseless flirting elicits a pass from an Englishman, which traumatizes her and prompts the Dodsworths to flee to Paris. There she repeats her behavior. While Sam wants to see sights and meet with active, productive, inventive people, Fran wants to be indulged by shallow, frivolous society. She needs to be the center of attention.

Her complete lack of self-awareness is revealed again and again. She insults and belittles her husband. When he returns to America for his college reunion, she sends him letters revealing—without any sense that revealing is what she's doing--that she's having an affair. And Sam suppresses his own sensibilities, remaining true, loyal, loving, indulgent, virtually to the end. ( )
2 vota weird_O | May 21, 2015 |
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this review, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted illegally.)

(CCLaP's rare-book service [cclapcenter.com/rarebooks] recently auctioned off a first edition, first printing copy of Sinclair Lewis' 1929 Dodsworth. Below is the write-up I did for the book's description.)

Poor Sinclair Lewis! Once one of the most celebrated writers on the planet, for an unprecedented string of commercial hits in the 1920s making vicious fun of the bored, corrupt, empty-headed middle class of the American Midwest, all of them turned into bestsellers precisely by the self-hating middle-classers he was making fun of, Lewis' career went quickly sour upon the start of the Great Depression, when these suddenly broke middle-classers found themselves being punished enough by life in general, and no longer needed his finger-wagging to produce the painless punishment that was assuaging their guilt throughout the "Roaring Twenties." But now that we're about to approach the centennial celebrations of these early hits, it's time that a new cultural assessment of Lewis be made, and that he be acknowledged as a sharp futurist who has a lot to say about our own times; because in reality you can strongly argue that he was the Jonathan Franzen of his times, a critically adored author (the first American writer in history to win the Nobel Prize, for example) who nonetheless heavily employed the pop culture and slang of his day in order to create devastating indictments against the consumerism, celebrity worship and herd mentality surrounding him, eaten up in the millions by the very people most guilty of the behavior, because they're able to recognize in these indictments every single person they know besides themselves, the problem that led to the Great Depression just as surely as it did in our own times to the 2008 Economic Meltdown.

Dodsworth was the last of these great hits, released just a few months before the stock market crash of 1929, and in a nutshell can be called "Lewis meets Henry James;" centered around Sam Dodsworth, the fifty-something founder of the hugely successful car manufacturer in Zenith* who has just sold the entire thing to a thinly disguised General Motors, now that he's "retired" his forty-something wife convinces him to go on an old-fashioned Grand Tour of Europe, just like rich Americans have been doing since the Victorian Age if they want to consider themselves truly cultured. (And note, by the way, that this would be the last period in history that this would be true, one of the many elements that makes this almost more important now as a historical document than as a piece of popular fiction; after the destruction of Europe and the ascendency of America at the end of World War Two, the global headquarters of culture quickly shifted to the US and specifically New York, and it suddenly became passe among rich Americans to take European grand tours anymore.) The simple plot, then, follows the same structure as so many of Lewis' novels from the '20s; our narrator starts as the living embodiment of whatever Lewis is trying to criticize (in this case, the business-focused, proudly ignorant American, forced on an unending parade of interchangeable cathedral visits and appalled by the lack of modern creature comforts now taken for granted in nearly every large American city), but after being exposed to the good things from that new environment (including, as always, the potential love of an enticingly independent modern woman) he slowly becomes a convert, just to be shunned by his former peers as pressure to "return to the fold."

And as mentioned, this is perhaps why collectors are best off thinking of this as an important historical document, rather than to focus on its admittedly only so-so quality as a novel; because given that Sam's payment for Dodsworth Motors would've likely been just a little cash but a whole lot of stock, it's fascinating to realize that in the real world, he would've been bankrupted just a few months after the events of this book take place, and that he suddenly would have a whole lot more to worry about than pompous Brits, brash expats, and how all those dirty artists in the Left Bank were always getting in his way. That's the treasure of this book in general, that it's a snapshot of a moment in history right before an unexpected period of tremendous upheaval, with none of the characters (nor even the author) even remotely aware that such upheaval is about to take place; note for example Sam's ho-hum attitude towards the pre-power Fascists he meets in Europe, or how one of the biggest sources of conflict is whether Sam is going to accept the high-powered VP position of the new conglomerate at home next year, or blow another million on staying at five-star hotels across the Continent for yet another year, a much more historically naked treat than any revisionist "winds of change" novel written after the fact. Lewis' fans in his own lifetime turned on him for this, but it's time that we restore the respect and fame he deserves for being such an astute prognosticator; and with this copy of Dodsworth being auctioned at a deliberately low starting bid to encourage an actual sale, this is a fine choice for a collector who wishes to "beat the odds" before this re-lionization of Lewis takes place next decade.

*For those who don't know, Lewis set many of his novels in the fictional Midwestern state of Winnemac, which was supposed to be sorta southish of Michigan and sorta northish of Indiana and Ohio; and Winnemac's version of Detroit or Cleveland or St. Louis was the industrial powerhouse of Zenith, where so many of his stories specifically take place. In fact, in Dodsworth Lewis makes almost a science-fiction author's amount of insider references to his now expansive alt-reality, name-dropping in casual conversations such former characters as George Babbitt and Elmer Gantry. ( )
1 vota jasonpettus | Oct 16, 2012 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Sinclair Lewisautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Fadiman, CliftonPrólogoautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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To Dorothy
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The aristocracy of Zenith were dancing at the Kennepoose Canoe Club.
Citas
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Paris is one of the largest, and certainly it is the pleasantest, of modern American cities. (Chapter 12)
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(Haz clic para mostrar. Atención: puede contener spoilers.)
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Meet Sam Dodsworth, an amiable fifty-year-old millionaire and "American Captain of Industry, believing in the Republican Party, high tariffs and, so long as they did not annoy him personally, in Prohibition and the Episcopal Church." Dodsworth runs an auto manufacturing firm, but his beautiful wife, Fran, obsessed with the notion that she is growing old, persuades him to sell his interest in the company and take her to Europe. He agrees for the sake of their marriage, but before long, the pretensions of the cosmopolitan scene prove more enticing to Fran than her husband. Both a devastating, surprisingly contemporary portrait of a marriage falling apart and a grand tour of the Europe of a bygone era, Dodsworth is stamped with Sinclair Lewis's signature satire, wickedly observant of America's foibles and great fun.

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