Sinclair Lewis

@Nobel Prize Winner in Literature, Career and Childhood

Sinclair Lewis was the first American writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature

Feb 7, 1885

MinnesotaAlcoholicsNobel Laureates In LiteratureAmericanYale UniversityWritersNovelistsShort Story WritersAquarius Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: February 7, 1885
  • Died on: January 10, 1951
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Nobel Prize Winner in Literature, Alcoholics, Nobel Laureates In Literature, Yale University, Writers, Novelists, Short Story Writers
  • City/State: Minnesota
  • Spouses: Dorothy Thompson, Grace Hegger Lewis
  • Siblings: Claude Lewis, Fred Lewis

Sinclair Lewis born at

Sauk Centre

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Birth Place

Sinclair Lewis married Grace Livingston Hegger, editor at Vogue magazine, in 1914. They had one son, Wells Lewis, who later joined the US Army and was killed in action during the Second World War. The couple spilt up in 1925.

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Personal Life

Three years later, on May 14, 1928, Lewis married Dorothy Thompson, a political newspaper columnist. This marriage too ended in a divorce in 1942. Their son Michael Lewis was an actor, who fathered three children; John Paul, Gregory Claude and Lesley.

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Personal Life

On January 10, 1951, Sinclair Lewis died from advanced alcoholism in a small clinic outside Rome. At that time, he was touring Europe. His body was cremated and the remains were brought back to the US to be buried in Sauk Center.

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Personal Life

Sinclair Lewis was born on February 7, 1885, in Sauk Centre, then a small village in the Steams County, Minnesota, to Dr. Edwin J. Lewis and Emma Kermott Lewis. The couple had three sons, out of which Sinclair was the youngest.

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Childhood & Early Life

From the beginning, Sinclair was a sensitive child. His father, who was a strict disciplinarian, did not really understand him. His mother died when he was around six years old. Consequently, he grew up alone without parental company. However, when his father married a second time, he began to enjoy his stepmother’s attention.

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Childhood & Early Life

Tall and ungainly, he did not have many friends at school and so he spent a lot of time reading. He also kept a diary. Nonetheless, he had a romantic mind and at the age of thirteen tried to run away from home with the aim of joining Spanish-American War as a drummer boy.

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Childhood & Early Life

He began writing when he was in high school. Few of his articles were published in Sauk Center newspapers. After graduating from school in 1902, he enrolled at Oberlin College for one year and finally joined Yale University in 1903.

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Childhood & Early Life

His study at the Yale University was interrupted as he took time off to work at Helicon Home Colony in New Jersey. During this period, he also took a trip to Panama to find work at Panama Canal that was being built under US supervision.

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Childhood & Early Life

After passing out from Yale, Sinclair Lewis began to work as a journalist for different publications, moving from place to place, changing jobs. At the same time, he mastered the art of writing shallow, but popular stories, many of which were bought by a wide variety of magazines. To earn additional revenues, he also sold plots to writer Jack London.

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Career

In 1912, Lewis published his first pot boiler novel, ‘Hike and the Aeroplane’ under the pseudonym of Tom Graham. His first serious work, which was published in 1914 in his own name, was ‘Our Mr. Wrenn: The Romantic Adventure of a Gentleman’. It sold 9000 copies. Reviewers found the storyline refreshing.

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Career

Between 1914 and 1919, he wrote four more novels. They were ‘The Trail of the Hawk: A Comedy of the Seriousness of Life’ (1915), ‘The Job’ (1917), 'The Innocents: A Story for Lovers' (1917) and ‘Free Air’ (1919). However, none of these novels was commercially successful.

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Career

Lewis had his first taste of success with ‘Main Street’ published in 1920. It was followed by a string of successful novels, such as ‘Babbit’ (1922), ‘Arrowsmith’ (1925), ‘Elmar Gantry’ (1927) and ‘Dodsworth’ (1929).

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Career

He also wrote ‘Mantrap’ (1926) and ‘The Man Who Knew Coolidge’ (1928) during this period; but they were not that successful. Other than the novels, Lewis also wrote many short stories for different magazines. ‘The Little Bear Bongo’ (1930) bought by Walt Disney Pictures is one of them.

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Career

‘Main Street’ published on October 23, 1920 was his first successful novel. It was a labor of love. He had started taking notes sometime in 1916 and finished writing the novel in 1920. It sold 180,000 copies in first six months only. Within a few years, the sales reached two millions.

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Major Works

’Babbitt’, published in 1922, is another of his best sellers. It is a satire of American life and culture and depicts midsize American cities. It was adapted for a film by Warner brothers twice; first time as a silent movie and then in 1934 as a talkie.

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Major Works

’It Can’t Happen Here’ (1935) is another of his major works. It is a political novel written during the rise of fascism in Europe and depicts an American politician who takes complete control of the government after he is elected as the President. It was later adapted both for the stage and film.

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Major Works