
Category: Adults, Classic, Historical Fiction
Language: EnglishKeywords: 1900 Actress Chicago New York City Theater
Written by Theodore Dreiser
Read by Laurel Lefkow
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged
Publisher: Naxos Audiobooks
Released: Apr 5, 2018
Length: 16 hrs 45min
A magnificent portrayal of 1890’s America and the harsh realities of a dog-eat-dog world, Sister Carrie lies at the forefront of American Naturalism. When poor young provincial woman Carrie Meeber arrives in Chicago, she little expects to be catapulted from lower-class woman to prominent Broadway actress. Passive and yielding, she lets circumstances coerce her into action and by good fortune she arrives at fame.
It is in Chicago that Carrie meets a successful businessman, Hurstwood, who helps her establish her name. Gripped by a strong attraction to Carrie, Hurstwood ends his marriage and moves with her to New York. Their relationship soon ends and, like a fish out of water, Hurstwood finds himself vagrant and destitute on the streets of an unfamiliar city, a poignant counterpoint to Carrie’s rapid rise. Frank, evocative and compelling, Sister Carrie gives us a version of the American dream with a gritty and unattractive reality.
Dreiser transforms the conventional fallen-woman story into a genuinely original work of imaginative fiction. He hurls his impressionable eighteen-year-old heroine into the amoral world of the big city and reveals, with powerful insight, the driving forces of our culture: America’s restless idealism, glamorous material seductions, and spiritual innocence. Many consider this the greatest novel on urban life every written.
A critical review—Sister Carrie, Theodore Dreiser’s revolutionary first novel, was published in 1900–sort of. The story of Carrie Meeber, an 18-year-old country girl who moves to Chicago and becomes a kept woman, was strong stuff at the turn of the century, and what Dreiser’s wary publisher released was a highly expurgated version. Times change, and we now have a restored “author’s cut” of Sister Carrie that shows how truly ahead of his time Dreiser was. First and foremost, he has written an astute, no moralizing account of a woman and her limited options in late-19th-century America. That’s impressive in and of itself, but Dreiser doesn’t stop there. Digging deeply into the psychological underpinnings of his characters, he gives us people who are often strangers to themselves, drifting numbly until fate pushes them on a path they can later neither defend nor even remember choosing.
There are 108 tracks in this NAXOS recording, I put them into two fairly equal folders for easier handling,
Cover image is a cigarette poster called Papier à Cigarettes JOB by Jane Atché (1872–1937)
Publisher: Naxos Audiobooks
Released: Apr 5, 2018
Length: 16 hrs 45min
A magnificent portrayal of 1890’s America and the harsh realities of a dog-eat-dog world, Sister Carrie lies at the forefront of American Naturalism. When poor young provincial woman Carrie Meeber arrives in Chicago, she little expects to be catapulted from lower-class woman to prominent Broadway actress. Passive and yielding, she lets circumstances coerce her into action and by good fortune she arrives at fame.
It is in Chicago that Carrie meets a successful businessman, Hurstwood, who helps her establish her name. Gripped by a strong attraction to Carrie, Hurstwood ends his marriage and moves with her to New York. Their relationship soon ends and, like a fish out of water, Hurstwood finds himself vagrant and destitute on the streets of an unfamiliar city, a poignant counterpoint to Carrie’s rapid rise. Frank, evocative and compelling, Sister Carrie gives us a version of the American dream with a gritty and unattractive reality.
Dreiser transforms the conventional fallen-woman story into a genuinely original work of imaginative fiction. He hurls his impressionable eighteen-year-old heroine into the amoral world of the big city and reveals, with powerful insight, the driving forces of our culture: America’s restless idealism, glamorous material seductions, and spiritual innocence. Many consider this the greatest novel on urban life every written.
A critical review—Sister Carrie, Theodore Dreiser’s revolutionary first novel, was published in 1900–sort of. The story of Carrie Meeber, an 18-year-old country girl who moves to Chicago and becomes a kept woman, was strong stuff at the turn of the century, and what Dreiser’s wary publisher released was a highly expurgated version. Times change, and we now have a restored “author’s cut” of Sister Carrie that shows how truly ahead of his time Dreiser was. First and foremost, he has written an astute, no moralizing account of a woman and her limited options in late-19th-century America. That’s impressive in and of itself, but Dreiser doesn’t stop there. Digging deeply into the psychological underpinnings of his characters, he gives us people who are often strangers to themselves, drifting numbly until fate pushes them on a path they can later neither defend nor even remember choosing.
There are 108 tracks in this NAXOS recording, I put them into two fairly equal folders for easier handling,
Cover image is a cigarette poster called Papier à Cigarettes JOB by Jane Atché (1872–1937)