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  1. Arrowsmith tells the story of bright and scientifically minded Martin Arrowsmith of Elk Mills, Winnemac (the same fictional state in which several of Lewis's other novels are set), as he makes his way from a small town in the Midwest to the upper echelons of the scientific community at a prestigious foundation in New York City.

  2. Arrowsmith, novel by Sinclair Lewis, published in 1925. The author declined to accept a Pulitzer Prize for the work because he had not been awarded the prize for his Main Street in 1921. The narrative concerns the personal and professional travails of Martin Arrowsmith, a Midwestern physician.

  3. Sinclair Lewis's Arrowsmith is more expansive and grandiose than his standard work, though it pulsates with his usual cynical themes. The book is a cradle-to-middle-age chronicle of an idealistic doctor, Martin Arrowsmith, who grows from a Midwestern medical student to one of the best-known physicians in the world.

  4. A short summary of Sinclair Lewis's Arrowsmith. This free synopsis covers all the crucial plot points of Arrowsmith.

  5. Arrowsmith is a biting critique of the medical profession and the commercialization of science. The novel won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1926—which Lewis declined to accept. Explore the full book summary, an in-depth character analysis of Martin Arrowsmith, and explanations of important quotes from Arrowsmith.

  6. Arrowsmith, the most widely read of Sinclair Lewis’s novels, is the incisive portrait of a man passionately devoted to science. As a bright, curious boy in a small Midwestern town, Martin Arrowsmith spends his free time in old Doc Vickerson’s office avidly devouring medical texts.

  7. Mar 4, 2008 · See all formats and editions. With an afterword by E. L. Doctorow—the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of one mans pursuit of intellectual freedom in the face of ignorance and corruption, from the author of Babbit.

    • Sinclair Lewis
  8. The Pulitzer Prize winning "Arrowsmith" (an award Lewis refused to accept) recounts the story of a doctor who is forced to give up his trade for reasons...

  9. This satirical novel by the Nobel Prizewinning author of It Cant Happen Here examines medicine in the modern world through the eyes of an idealistic man.The...

  10. Lewis was a romantic in many ways as well as a gifted satirist and realist. And, in many ways, Arrowsmith, when juxtaposed against Fitzgerald's world, is an optimistic novel, imbued with romance and a significant amount of faith in its protagonist, Martin Arrowsmith.