Sinclair Lewis & Antique Books: Collecting the Works of a Forgotten Legend
By Shane Dayton, published Sep 26, 2007
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I am a huge Sinclair Lewis fan, both because of his clear, easy to follow prose as a writer, and also because I am a book hound and love collecting antique books. To me, there is nothing better than a well written old book. While we even take things such as automobiles and airplanes for granted, novels such as Free Air and Hike and the Aeroplane show us a time when these things were anything but commonplace. Keep in mind that "Hike" was only printed nine years after the Wright Brothers' first flight, and Free Air predates the Model T.
On this list, Tennis as I Play it will be listed as being by Maurice E McLoughlin, though it was actually ghost written by Sinclair Lewis, and is now considered a valuable collectible antique book because of this fact. The rest of these novels were indeed credited to the famous American author and early 20th century icon. All of the first editions of these novels are now valuable, though the early ones are much more valuable as the later ones. Main Street, Sinclair Lewis's 1920 novel, was the one that made him famous, and so the ones before this point tend to be much more valuable since they're rarer, while the more modern ones were best sellers, and thus generally not worth as much.
The Early Works
1912: Hike and the Aeroplane
1914: Our Mr. Wren
1915: The Trail of the Hawk & Tennis As I Play It*
1917: The Job & The Innocents
1919: Free Air
Coming into Fame
1920: Main Street (This was truly Sinclair Lewis's break out novel)
1922: Babbitt
1925: Arrowsmith & Man Trap
1927: Elmer Gantry
1928: The Man Who Knew Coolidge
1929: Dodsworth
1930s
1933: Ann Vickers
1934: Work of Art
1935: Jay Hawker & It Can't Happen Here
1938: The Prodigal Parents
You may also like...
- Re-Discovered Treasures: The Job by Sinclair Lewis
- Hidden Literary Gems: Our Mr. Wrenn by Sinclair Lewis
- How to Become an Antique Book Collector for Fun and Profit
- Sinclair Lewis's the Trail of the Hawk - Book Review
- It Can't Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis: Scarily Prophetic Warning?
- Sinclair Lewis: Literary Legend is Still One of a Kind
- Sinclair Lewis - "The Innocents" Book Review
- Book Collecting 101: The How's, Where's, and Why's
- Interested in Starting a Collection? Check Out Book Collecting
- Book Collecting for Fun and Profit
Takeaways
- Antique novels
- Books reflecting early 1900s technology
Did You Know?
Sinclair Lewis was the inspiration for John Steinbeck, who remains remembered as one of the all time greats while his mentor and hero is mostly forgotten.
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Posted on 10/12/2007 at 9:10:00 PM