Reviews

Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis, Sheba Blake

thmeyer59's review against another edition

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2.0

Conservatism 101... 'American Democracy did not imply and equality of wealth, but did demand a wholesome sameness of thought, dress, painting, morals, and vocabulary.'
nuff said . . .

franklekens's review against another edition

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1.0

I can't read this, I gave up about a fifth of the way through, it seemed much too dated (and the characterization too flat and unsympathetic) to hold my interest.

trostro25's review against another edition

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3.0

A good read about the rewards and price paid in conforming to an urban lifestyle in America in the early 20th century .

effgeesstories's review against another edition

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5.0

I don't normally assign star ratings to classics, because my assumption is that if a work is still in print and selling long after the author's demise, it must be a five-star book. To many people anyway. But I've given Babbitt a five-star rating despite its "minor classic" status because I would like everyone to read it. Why? Because, despite being published in 1922, the book is so timely that it almost seems prophetic. Not in the dystopian way of 1984 or Fahrenheit 451, but in a " the more things change, the more they stay the same" sort of way. The technology is different. The slang is different – you'll laugh at the "near-swearing" –but the people and their "issues" are exactly the same as now. Wonderful book.

jonisayin's review against another edition

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4.0

While Babbitt was a bit tedious, Lewis has put together a satyre of humans likely conformity for the purpose of existing in small town America, (and probably every other small town in the world). We not only WANT to fit in - we have to fit in.

George Babbitt - mid 40's, a bit pudgy and possessing all of early 20th century cliché maleness goes about his mid life crises in totaly expected motions. He is a self important braggart who regrets the loss of his youthful enthusiasms. He circles back to his socially rebellious attitudes, has an affair and even tries to "dress" like his younger self. Only to find that he will be, and IS punished for stepping out of the expected conformity. He grows, but he also settles back into his "place". A little less judgmental for the growth.

bubbarich's review against another edition

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5.0

Ugly and painful story about an ugly and painful life, that looks like many or maybe all human lives.

I found it bearable because of the picture of life in the 1920s, and because it was very perceptive about obtuseness. And it showed me things to attend to and live more mindfully, especially when dealing with other people.

Masterfully written, multiple layers of sarcasm and irony in every action and interaction.

ddroc's review against another edition

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5.0

This book could have been written today!

mkmatheson's review against another edition

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3.0

Great satire, middling plot.

bookphair's review against another edition

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3.0

I need to take a break from Sinclair. This will be finished, but the bitterness towards the conventional and the mocking of the status quo is wearing. I agree with him, and it's completely contemporary and relevant...but enough already. More after Book Club (no spoilers!)

eleanorfranzen's review against another edition

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This is the story of a midlife crisis.

One of the historical criticisms of Babbitt has been that it has no plot. George F. Babbitt, the protagonist, is a realtor, with a brown, drab wife named Myra, a serious daughter in her 20s named Verona, a son in his late teens, the irrepressible Ted, and a ten-year-old daughter nicknamed Tinka, who retains her childhood aura of innocence and indifference throughout most of the novel. They live in the unimpeachable suburb of Floral Heights in the small Midwestern city of Zenith, variously said to have been modeled on Cincinnati, Kansas City, Minneapolis, and Milwaukee. The first few chapters take up just one day in Babbitt’s life, getting the reader fully acquainted and situated with the social atmosphere of middle-class, business-owning Zenith. Babbitt is a Republican voter, a Presbyterian, pro-business and anti-immigration, jovially and impersonally antisemitic, a member of the Athletic Club, the Boosters Club, and the Order of Good Fellows. He is, in other words, a certain kind of Americana personified. What precipitates the change in his life, partway through the novel, is his friend Paul. Paul shoots his own wife, Zilla, in despair at the aridity and unhappiness of their marriage, for which he can see no end in sight. He doesn’t kill her, but maims her for life, and is sentenced to several years in prison.

This event is an earthquake for Babbitt. When he first hears that Paul has shot Zilla—recounted to him over the phone by Myra—he is too busy boasting to her of his election to vice president of the Athletic Club to listen to what she is saying; she has to repeat herself more than three times. The news shakes his provincial self-satisfaction to the core. This feels right to me. Bereavement, crime, the intrusion of violence: those are things that can change the material quality of a life in a moment, and therefore they are also things that can force introspection, a kind of reckoning. In Babbitt’s case, he is not intellectual enough to think through his own dissatisfaction, but he is just sensitive enough to feel it properly for the first time in years. His response is to have an affair with a customer, the splendidly-named widow Mrs. Tanis Judique. Tanis’s friends are bohemians, or as bohemian as you can get in the Midwest in the 1920s: they flout Prohibition openly, drive too fast, throw loud parties, stay up late, quarrel publicly. Babbitt’s sojourn among “the Bunch” is, in a manner of speaking, a bid for mental and spiritual freedom (reflected also by his vocal championing of Seneca Doane, a local lawyer he had previously decried, along with his Booster Club pals, as an unpatriotic socialist). But ultimately it’s just as empty a life as the suburban rounds of Sunday School committees and dinner parties, and Babbitt isn’t well suited to this form of rebellion, either.

What brings him back is Myra’s sudden illness. She has already confronted him, in desperation and anger, about his affair, in a passage which contains some of Lewis’s most incisive and honest writing on the sexual double standard and the cruel asymmetry of white suburban middle-class male entitlement to the labours and loyalties of their wives. When she is suddenly taken into hospital and has to undergo major surgery, Babbitt repents: he realises that he does love her, cannot bear the thought of her death, and he has already lost nearly all of his friends over his sociopolitical non-conformism. It is the mirror image of Paul’s attempted murder, and it has the same effect, like an amnesiac being hit hard on the head again. The threat of mortality can bounce us out of our daily rut, or throw us back in.

At the end of the novel, Babbitt has returned to the bosom of Presbyterianism, Republicanism, monogamy, and commerce. His son Ted, however, ends the book on a note that echoes the generational-change aspect of The Age of Innocence‘s ultimate scene. He elopes with Eunice Littlefield, the literal girl next door. Ted’s announcement that Eunice is now his wife is met with horror and resistance by both Myra and Verona (whose allegedly radical social ideas demonstrably do not stand up to the test). But Babbitt—the conservative patriarch par excellence—wonders if it’s really all that bad. After all, what’s done is done, and Eunice seems a nice girl. The final sentence of the book has “the Babbitt men” setting out to confront the disapproval of their womenfolk.

So it’s the story of one man’s midlife crisis. But it’s also a tragedy, read one way—Babbitt is ultimately too complacent to change his life—and a bittersweet Shakespearean comedy read another way—Babbitt runs around the Athenian woods for a while but ultimately finds his way home. It’s also worth thinking about the novel as a microcosmic representation of something that was happening on a wider scale. America’s midlife crisis, perhaps, as its manufacturing and political importance became global, as it became pompous, morally compromised by prosperity, lost its youthful zip.

This is the seventh book for my year-long American Classics reading project.