Free Air (Annotated)

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Free Air (Annotated)
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  1. Kindle Edition: 226 pages: 1 item
  2. Author: Sinclair Lewis
  3. Format: Kindle eBook
  4. Sales Rank in Books: #53118

Product Review

- Transcribed word-for-word by hand
- With full navigation
- Annotated

"Free Air" is one of the emblematic road trip novels of the early twentieth century, later serving as a model for Jack Kerouac's "On the Road."

As with most travel literature, the journey of the hero and heroine can be seen on many levels, including journeys of self-discovery, inner change, class consciousness and liberation.

As a literary homage to Sinclair Lewis, "Free Air" is also the book that the fictional character Jimmy Darmody is reading in an early episode of HBO's "Boardwalk Empire" as he leaves Atlantic City by train for Chicago.

This augmented version has a fully operational hot-linked Table of Contents and has been meticulously mediated by hand from the original edition.

Product Description

- Transcribed word-for-word by hand
- With full navigation
- Annotated

"Free Air" is one of the emblematic road trip novels of the early twentieth century, later serving as a model for Jack Kerouac's "On the Road."

As with most travel literature, the journey of the hero and heroine can be seen on many levels, including journeys of self-discovery, inner change, class consciousness and liberation.

As a literary homage to Sinclair Lewis, "Free Air" is also the book that the fictional character Jimmy Darmody is reading in an early episode of HBO's "Boardwalk Empire" as he leaves Atlantic City by train for Chicago.

This augmented version has a fully operational hot-linked Table of Contents and has been meticulously mediated by hand from the original edition.

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)

53 of 57 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Why couldn't all his books have been like this?, August 13, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Free Air (Paperback)
Apparently Lewis didn't become disillusioned and embittered until after 1919, when this absolutely delightful book was published. We have an original copy that my mom got from a library sale or something. She loved it, I loved it, which is no suprise because I am a sucker for sweet old novels, but the most ringing endorsement it that my impossible-to-please dad loved it. In fact, he was the one who made me read it.There really isn't a lot of substance to this book - it's mostly fluff. (There's some social commentary in the later parts of the book, when they're in Seattle, but I try to ignore it.) But it's grade-A, high-quality fluff we're talking about here. Claire Boltwood's transformation from a Brooklyn snob to a real woman is highly believable, and Milt Daggett is one of the sweetest, most wholesome men ever created. Set against the well-painted backdrop of the American West, the story shifts from amusing to heartwarming to bittersweet and back again...Read more


21 of 22 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Early, less profound Sinclair Lewis, April 24, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Free Air (Paperback)
One of my favorite books. I was lucky to get a copy (original edition) from the New York Public Library. Have read all his well-known books, but might like this best. His usual themes of Americana, social climbing, etc. But this is a "road" book and a very innocent love story - wonderful book by one of the best American writers. I'm surprised it's in print since it's such a minor title of his.


18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars unpaved roads, flat tires and chasing that dream, April 22, 2005
T. Patrick Killough "All about Patrick" (Black Mountain, NC United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Free Air (Paperback)
Sinclair Lewis's FRESH AIR, published in 1919, is sheer, chuckling delight. It offers no great insights into psyches or interpersonal relations. Read it rather as a straightforward magazine serial pot boiler romance of frontier boy and car mechanic (Milt Daggett) pursuing a sentimental girl (Claire Boltwood) worth an impressive $5,000 around 1916. The girl, a high living Brooklynite, is driving her ailing workaholic father in a heavy Gomez-Dep roadster long day after weary day across northern plains and mountains towards a vacation with cousins in Seattle. She wonders whether she can ultimately avoid marrying Jeff Saxton, a notably older beau back in sophisticated New York.

Milt complicates things by falling in love with Claire after pulling her car out of a Minnesota mud hole created by a German hick to extort money from stranded motorists. Milt almost instantly decides to drive in his modest Teal "tin beetle" or "bug" with or near Claire and her father all the way to...Read more

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