Throwback Thursday

ThrowbackThursday

Throwback Thursday is a weekly meme hosted by Renee at It’s Book Talk. Throwback Thursday is designed to be an opportunity to share old favourites as well as books that you’ve finally got around to reading that were published over a year ago. If you decide to take part, please link back to It’s Book Talk.

I’ve decided to delve back into the earliest days of my blog (not that it’s that old) and share one of my first reviews. It also happens to be a book first published in 1940.   It’s the first in a series that I’d planned to continue reading but, sadly, blogging has taken over and the lure of new books has kept me from reading any more of them. However, one day, eh?


World’s End by Upton Sinclair

worlds-endAbout the Book

World’s End is the first novel in Upton Sinclair’s Lanny Budd series. First published in 1940, the story covers the period from 1913 to 1919. This is the beginning of a monumental 7,340 page novel, the story of young American, Lanny Budd, which starts in Europe in 1913. It is also an intimate record of a great world which fell victim to its own civilization. A new world was about to be born.

 

 

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My Review

Lanny is drawn to art, poetry and music but, as the son of an American munitions manufacturer, is exposed to arguments (some would say, cynical arguments) of commercial reality,  power-broking and real politik.  The conflict Lanny experiences as he struggles to make sense of these opposing forces is at the heart of the novel.   This is a long novel and at times, particularly in part five covering the attempts to arrive at a peace settlement, it seems more straight history than historical fiction but Lanny’s Forrest Gump-like ability to be at the centre of important events and several underlying stories stop it from feeling completely like a college course.  Upton Sinclair depicts the motives of the countries involved (particularly Great Britain, France and America) with brutal clarity:

“Now they were here, not to form a League of Nations, not to save mankind from future bloodshed, but to divvy the swag.”

That the war was fought for control of natural resources (coal, oil, steel) and territory is made very clear and, in this sense, the lesson of history is that nothing much has changed.


UptonSinclairAbout the Author

Upton Sinclair wrote close to one hundred books in many genres. He achieved popularity in the first half of the twentieth century, acquiring particular fame for his classic muckraking novel, The Jungle (1906). To gather information for the novel, Sinclair spent seven weeks undercover working in the meat packing plants of Chicago. These direct experiences exposed the horrific conditions in the U.S. meat packing industry, causing a public uproar that contributed in part to the passage a few months later of the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act. In 1943, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.


 

9 thoughts on “Throwback Thursday

  1. I understand about blogging taking over the TBR pile! I am always caught between visiting the books on my bucket list, and the books that are just released. I decided to compromise, which is why my blog is an eclectic mix of both!

    I do not think (in most cases) a book loses its power over time, which is the beauty of the reader community. It’s magic I tell you!

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    1. Yes, I think over time one achieves the right balance (may be still looking for mine lol) but in the early days of blogging it’s easy to carried away by the opportunities for shiny new books.

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