Rise of Silas Lapham, The by William Dean Howells (1837 - 1920)

PODCAST · arts

Rise of Silas Lapham, The by William Dean Howells (1837 - 1920)

The Rise of Silas Lapham is the most widely read of W.D. Howells’ novels. An example of literary realism, the story is about a farmer (Silas Lapham) who launches a very successful paint business, and moves his family up the social ladder of Boston. Lapham, however, is not one of the new types of American businessman, the ruthless plutocrat, rather he is the old-fashioned trustworthy Yankee trader, and the story deals with how he fares in the industrial capitalist environment. It is also a novel of manners, telling the story of the courtship of a daughter, and the difficulties the family deals with in attempting to move from one social class to another. (Summary by Margaret Espaillat)

  1. 27
  2. 26
  3. 25
  4. 24
  5. 23
  6. 22
  7. 21
  8. 20
  9. 19
  10. 18
  11. 17
  12. 16
  13. 15
  14. 14
  15. 13
  16. 12
  17. 11
  18. 10
  19. 9
  20. 8
  21. 7
  22. 6
  23. 5
  24. 4
  25. 3
  26. 2
  27. 1

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

TOPICS IN THIS SHOW

Click any topic to search every transcript on PodParley for moments someone mentioned it.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Rise of Silas Lapham is the most widely read of W.D. Howells’ novels. An example of literary realism, the story is about a farmer (Silas Lapham) who launches a very successful paint business, and moves his family up the social ladder of Boston. Lapham, however, is not one of the new types of American businessman, the ruthless plutocrat, rather he is the old-fashioned trustworthy Yankee trader, and the story deals with how he fares in the industrial capitalist environment. It is also a novel of manners, telling the story of the courtship of a daughter, and the difficulties the family deals with in attempting to move from one social class to another. (Summary by Margaret Espaillat)

HOSTED BY

LibriVox

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!