Note from the Blogger

These mini-reviews are intended to be short recommendations, not full blown literary reviews. Please feel free to add your own comments. -- Tim Drake

Monday, December 30, 2019

The Magnificent Ambersons (1918) By Booth Tarkington


Booth Tarkington was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1919 for his classic The Magnificent Ambersons. While seeming lost to time, Tarkington is experiencing a revival of sorts with the re-publication earlier this year of his major works by the Library of America. In addition to The Magnificent Ambersons, the volume also includes the novel Alice Adams, awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1922.
    
The Magnificent Ambersons is a family history set in “a Midland city,” a fictional version of Tarkington’s hometown of Indianapolis.  The novel also serves as a social & cultural history of the U.S. spanning from post-Civil War, through the Gilded-Age, and the beginning of the country’s industrialization,and urbanization. The conversion of the nation from the days of horse and buggy, to the automobile, plays a major subplot in the book, providing ample opportunity to espouse thought-provoking and sometimes biting social commentary.  Tarkington (1869-1946) was clearly a keen observer, evidenced by his writing.

The Ambersons are the leading family in town, their wealth made through shrewd investments made by Major Amberson, the patriarch of the family.  They stand at the top of the pecking order, economically and socially.  Their story is told through the character of George Amberson Minafer. 

George is the Major’s only grandson.  Raised in the lap of luxury, he figures out at a very young age he will be the heir to the family’s fortune and prestige.  The idea he would ever need an occupation has never occurred to him.  With that upbringing, it is only natural he would become an arrogant, spoiled, holy terror, with an oft validated belief he was above personal responsibility. The town folk, at all economic levels, hate him and can’t wait for him to someday get his comeuppance. How and when that happens is near the book’s conclusion.


In 1942, Orson Welles directed a critically acclaimed film adaptation of the novel with an all-star cast, and lending his own voice to narration, much as he did in Citizen Kane.  The movie (available on Amazon Prime) is good, but to be a manageable length had to cut out most of the social commentary that ties it all together.  Also, unbelievably edited out the film was any specificity as to George’s final comeuppance – you’ll have to read the book.

Recommendation:  Yes, defnitely. This ranks as one of the best books I’ve ever read. 

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