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Paperback Dawn: An Autobiography of Early Youth Book

ISBN: 1574230735

ISBN13: 9781574230734

Dawn

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Book Overview

In his realistic depiction of the thwarted aspirations and unfulfilled hungers of the turn-of-the-century American underclass, Theodore Dreiser was a socially-conscious writer far ahead of his time. Dawn, the journalist-turned-novelist's brutally candid autobiography of his first nineteen years, was composed between 1912 and 1915, but withheld by Dreiser due to his misgivings about the potential impact of its frank revelations, daring even by today's standards, of adolescent sexuality. Encouraged by his preeminence in American letters at the time and by the more relaxed moral codes, he finally published it in 1931 (it was followed by Newspaper Days as the next chapter of his autobiography).

Critics immediately recognized the book as an American classic, comparing it to Rousseau's Confessions and The Education of Henry Adams. "Dawn is a story of growth", the New York Evening Post noted, "of the persistent spiritual and physical vitality of a man conquering despite all the accidents of economics and of personal 'chemistry' which tended to retard him".

The new Black Sparrow edition, complete with notes, index and appendices, makes available to the modern reader Dreiser's powerful and unforgettable account of a difficult childhood spent struggling to rise out of impoverished and sordid surroundings. It is a gripping tale indeed: the writer's father, a German immigrant traumatized by failure in his adopted land, dwindles to an embittered bigot. The large family is scattered around the Midwest. In Chicago, young Theodore washes dishes in a greasy spoon, cleans stoves in a rundown hardware store, counts freight cars in a railroad yard. An episode of petty crime teaches him a lesson about attempting to live beyond his means. Skeptical and pragmatic, he's nonetheless prey to continual hothouse dreams of frustrated romance as he pursues back-alley sexual adventures. Through all his experiences and hard times it is fascinating to watch the foundation of Dreiser's vivid artistic vision gradually being formed.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

read this from dusk till d-d-dawn

Dreiser follows such a simple structure. First, the dreamy, hypnotic recurrent images of early childhood, that only melted into perspective years later. Second, the glory of sexual awakening, mixed with the whitewater current of ambition, shuffling like white noise into his consciousness only once he tunes his ears to listen. To the details. Dreiser loved his mother, in a way that may have swung past the platonic, and certainly shaped his female ideal. She does seem an ideal parent, with her selfless love, endless devotion in hard work, and support regardless of the wayward tendencies of her iconoclastic brood. His father seems little more than a hollowed out Jesus enthusiast, who, following the personal disaster that surely damaged his brain, emptily follows Christ's lead by punishing his children for not being religious enough. Dreiser himself came of age by losing it to the immigrant bakery owner's daughter, an idle miscreant long forgotten outside these pages. Dreiser was bound by two diametrically opposed desires - one for sex, the other for love, and as a wise man once said, these rarely overlap, especially for Dreiser in his early youth. His platonic ideal is the shy, frumpy type, while he can't help but be lured in by the pretty ones. His sex complex keeps him from many a lay, which he overcomes by ravishing a young Italian waywardess. Poe once said something like "Any man who chooses to tell about his life the way it really is will change the world forever, but no one has the courage to do it." Dreiser comes close, though I doubt this has stood much ground the test of time. I was referred to it by one of Fitzgerald's early characters. Dreiser doesn't hesitate to wag his finger at himself, and never, ever makes me wish not to have had the golden opportunity to join him for lunch of a foggy Tuesday.

Incredible Memoir Writing

"Dawn" may be stronger than Dreiser's fiction, which is saying a good deal. He shows a remarkable memory and attention to detail. I am admittedly biased because I identified so closely with his experiences as a child, youth, and adult, but the scenes in this volume are well drawn and he overcomes his sometimes florid style and difficulties with fluid language well here. Along with "Newspaper Days," one gets an intimate look at the life of this talented and important author.
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