Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Sister Carrie

Sister Carrie
Sister Carrie
Author: Theodore Dreiser
ISBN-13: 9780451519696
ISBN-10: 0451519698
Publication Date: 1/1/1962
Pages: 475
Rating:
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
 2

4.3 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Signet Book
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Sister Carrie on + 54 more book reviews
Dreiser is a consummate author. His writing keeps me so involved that everything else fades away.
reviewed Sister Carrie on + 2 more book reviews
I get it, I get it....men and capitalism are evil, put down your hammer, my head hurts.

I did enjoy this novel for describing life during the tumultuous social changes of the industrial revolution and I appreciate the impact this novel must have enjoyed when it came out. I did not enjoy the heavy handed writing and messaging.
reviewed Sister Carrie on + 59 more book reviews
The story of the vicissitudes attendant upon the publisher's suppression, in 1901, of Sister Carrie is the history of America's emergence from the fog of suspicion and fear of realism in the novel.
perryfran avatar reviewed Sister Carrie on + 1229 more book reviews
Theodore Dreiser was a writer of the late 19th and early 20th century who was part of a larger group of writers in the school of naturalism or literary realism. These writers include Emile Zola, Frank Norris, Henry James, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, etc. Naturalistic works tend to focus on the darker aspects of life, including poverty, racism, violence, prejudice, disease, corruption, prostitution, and filth. As a result, naturalistic writers were frequently criticized for focusing too much on human vice and misery. But overall, they tended to look at life realistically many times without a happy ending as in romances of the time. I read Dreiser's An American Tragedy many years ago and always thought it one of the great American classics. I have been meaning to read Sister Carrie for years and finally got around to it. Because of the themes of the novel, Dreiser and his wife cut and revised the original text significantly before its publication in 1900. In 1981, the full unexpurgated edition was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press. The edition I read was the 1900 edition which is the standard text of the novel.

The story is really pretty simple. Carrie, who lives in a small town in Wisconsin, moves to Chicago when she is 18 years old to stay with her sister and try to make a living. She looks for work in Chicago at various places and eventually finds work at a shoe factory making very scant wages. The work is hard and the hours long and Carrie doesn't last long. But on the train ride to Chicago, she met a salesman or "drummer" named Drouet who later meets up with her and rescues her from her life of drudgery by buying her clothes and moving her into some decent rooms. Of course, he also stays with her in the rooms. No explicit sex is ever mentioned but it is definitely implied. Druet later introduces Carrie to a Mr. Hurstwood, who is the manager of a "resort" or club and who is quite wealthy. Hurstwood falls for Carrie and ends up leaving his wife and taking Carrie to New York. But when he leaves Chicago, he steals $10,000 so he can start a new life after his wife sued him for divorce. He is caught, however, and ends up returning most of the money, leaving him with little to survive on. In the mean time, Carrie has her eyes set on the stage after getting some good reviews in a local production in Chicago. She eventually makes it big on the New York stage while Hurstwood falls to very bleak circumstances and ends up living on the streets after Carrie leaves him.

I guess Dreiser was trying to show how life is not always happy and circumstances seem to determine how you end up. While Carrie seemed to make it to her dreams, she was never happy. Hurstwood went from being very well off to ending up totally distraught and with no hope. While Druet carried on as he always did as a rake and wanting to socialize and have fun. None of the characters in the novel were very likable. Carrie seemed to use people at her convenience while Hurstwood left his home and family for a pretty face. But overall I thought this novel was definitely worth reading even though some of the language seems a little stilted today.
perryfran avatar reviewed Sister Carrie on + 1229 more book reviews
Theodore Dreiser was a writer of the late 19th and early 20th century who was part of a larger group of writers in the school of naturalism or literary realism. These writers include Emile Zola, Frank Norris, Henry James, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, etc. Naturalistic works tend to focus on the darker aspects of life, including poverty, racism, violence, prejudice, disease, corruption, prostitution, and filth. As a result, naturalistic writers were frequently criticized for focusing too much on human vice and misery. But overall, they tended to look at life realistically many times without a happy ending as in romances of the time. I read Dreiser's An American Tragedy many years ago and always thought it one of the great American classics. I have been meaning to read Sister Carrie for years and finally got around to it. Because of the themes of the novel, Dreiser and his wife cut and revised the original text significantly before its publication in 1900. In 1981, the full unexpurgated edition was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press. The edition I read was the 1900 edition which is the standard text of the novel.

The story is really pretty simple. Carrie, who lives in a small town in Wisconsin, moves to Chicago when she is 18 years old to stay with her sister and try to make a living. She looks for work in Chicago at various places and eventually finds work at a shoe factory making very scant wages. The work is hard and the hours long and Carrie doesn't last long. But on the train ride to Chicago, she met a salesman or "drummer" named Drouet who later meets up with her and rescues her from her life of drudgery by buying her clothes and moving her into some decent rooms. Of course, he also stays with her in the rooms. No explicit sex is ever mentioned but it is definitely implied. Druet later introduces Carrie to a Mr. Hurstwood, who is the manager of a "resort" or club and who is quite wealthy. Hurstwood falls for Carrie and ends up leaving his wife and taking Carrie to New York. But when he leaves Chicago, he steals $10,000 so he can start a new life after his wife sued him for divorce. He is caught, however, and ends up returning most of the money, leaving him with little to survive on. In the mean time, Carrie has her eyes set on the stage after getting some good reviews in a local production in Chicago. She eventually makes it big on the New York stage while Hurstwood falls to very bleak circumstances and ends up living on the streets after Carrie leaves him.

I guess Dreiser was trying to show how life is not always happy and circumstances seem to determine how you end up. While Carrie seemed to make it to her dreams, she was never happy. Hurstwood went from being very well off to ending up totally distraught and with no hope. While Druet carried on as he always did as a rake and wanting to socialize and have fun. None of the characters in the novel were very likable. Carrie seemed to use people at her convenience while Hurstwood left his home and family for a pretty face. But overall I thought this novel was definitely worth reading even though some of the language seems a little stilted today.