Newspaper Days: An Autobiography

Couverture
David R. Godine Publisher, 2000 - 771 pages

During Christmas 1891, Dreiser, age twenty-one and miserable as a bill collector in Chicago, decided to find a job as a reporter: "I conceived of newspapers as wonderlands in which all concerned were prosperous and happy. . . I was also determined to shake off the garments of the commonplace in which I seemed swathed and step forth into the public arena, where I could be seen and understood for what I was--a writer." He at last found a slot at the Chicago Daily Globe, helping cover the 1892 Democratic National Convention.
This, in turn, led to jobs with newspapers in St. Louis, Toledo, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Pittsburgh--a scraping, unremunerative, eight-year journey through bustling railroad towns, with New York and Pulitzer's World the final terminal. He started as a reporter, but found greater success as a feature writer, where he was better able to bend fact toward fiction. He specialized in lowlife stories, the research for which was a working education in the brutalities of life: "The police courts, the jails, the houses of ill repute, trade failures and trickery--it was all a grand magnificent spectacle: " a pageant of human weakness, wickedness, and survival through cunning and courage. "Everywhere I looked I found a terrifying desire for lust or pleasure or wealth, accompanied by a heartlessness which was freezing to the soul, or a dogged resignation to deprivation and misery." He covered lynchings, streetcar strikes, robberies and murders--all of it testing his abilities as an observer and awakening the novelist within. It was the school that would prepare him for Sister Carrie (1900), Jennie Gerhardt (1911), and An American Tragedy (1925). First published in 1922 in what the editor calls an "expurgated abridgment," Newspaper Days is here published in an edition based on Dreiser's original typescript.

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Section 1
3
Section 2
28
Section 3
49
Section 4
68
Section 5
91
Section 6
105
Section 7
135
Section 8
156
Section 22
419
Section 23
439
Section 24
459
Section 25
464
Section 26
498
Section 27
503
Section 28
509
Section 29
532

Section 9
163
Section 10
171
Section 11
198
Section 12
229
Section 13
240
Section 14
282
Section 15
295
Section 16
335
Section 17
345
Section 18
357
Section 19
365
Section 20
385
Section 21
396
Section 30
558
Section 31
581
Section 32
600
Section 33
613
Section 34
675
Section 35
683
Section 36
688
Section 37
689
Section 38
708
Section 39
745
Section 40
746
Section 41
747

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À propos de l'auteur (2000)

Theodore Dreiser was one of the most influential American authors of his generation. His novels and nonfiction narratives, which he began publishing in his thirties, were controversial for their gritty realism, sexual frankness, and sympathy for the plight of underrepresented people.

Informations bibliographiques