SISTER CARRIE
Title: SISTER CARRIE
Category: /Society & Culture/Religion
Details: Words: 7235 | Pages: 26 (approximately 235 words/page)
SISTER CARRIE
Category: /Society & Culture/Religion
Details: Words: 7235 | Pages: 26 (approximately 235 words/page)
Sister Carrie Author Experience 
What most struck Sister Carrie's first readers was the clarity and understanding that Dreiser brought to the figure of Hurstwood. The novel's heroine, however, puzzled many reviewers, who found her to be, as William Marion Reedy put it, "real" but "paradoxically . . . shadowy.'' Words like "shadowy," "nebulous," "paradoxical" expressed the uneasiness early critics felt about the character. Even the book's admirers tended to think that its "extraordinary 
power . . . has little to 
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emotional instability is in 
Richard Lingeman, Theodore Dreiser: At the Gates of the City, 1871-
1907 (New York; Putnam's, 1986), pp. 392-6.
17. Warwick Wadlington makes a strong case for the existence in 
Carrie of a "core of innate psychic activity that exists buried in 
all [Dreiser's] characters, rising fitfully, 'opportunistically' to 
the surface only when an external reality seems to promise 
fulfillment,'' in "Pathos and Dreiser," Southern Review 7 (Spring 
1971): 411-29; reprinted in Pizer, Critical Essays, p. 222.