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 Location:  Home » Books » General » Cliffsnotes Rise of Silas Lapham (Cliffs Notes)  
Cliffsnotes Rise of Silas Lapham (Cliffs Notes)
Author: William Dean Howells
Publisher: Cliffs Notes
Category: Book

List Price: $4.50
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 1255658

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 62
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.2 x 0.2

ISBN: 0822011476
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.4
UPC: 785555011229
EAN: 9780822011477
ASIN: 0822011476

Publication Date: October 1985
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: *It is new. Expedited shipping available.

Also Available In:

  • Unknown Binding - The rise of Silas Lapham (A selected edition of W. D. Howells)
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham (Signet classics)
  • Paperback - THE RISE OF SILAS LAPHAM
  • Library Binding - Rise Of Silas Lapham (Notable American Authors)
  • Paperback - Rise of Silas Lapham (N 374 ALS)
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  • Unknown Binding - The rise of Silas Lapham,
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  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham (Penguin Classics)
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham (Oxford World's Classics)
  • Hardcover - Howells Rise of Silas Lapham (A Norton critical edition)
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  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham (Signet Classics)
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - The Rise of Silas Lapham
  • Paperback - Rise of Silas Lapham
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A greedy, unscrupulous man loses his business and lover. In his humility he begins to think of others and makes not a material, but spiritual and ethical rise. This is a book of tragicomedy, romanticism, realism, society and art, as well as a study of American culture.


Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Good Overall Experience   March 8, 2007
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

The merchandise arrived timely and the overall experience was a good one.


5 out of 5 stars One of his best   March 24, 2005
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

You might be able to take a man of humble beginnings and make him a rich man, but can he ever cross the line into Society? Silas Lapham becomes rich from paint that he sells, but fails totally in his attempt to become an accepted member of the upper class. The book also concerns a misunderstood love interest by one of Lapham's daughters: the young man is actually in love with his other daughter. Lapham's business fails at the end, but he doesn't sacrifice his integrity. Which is why it is only the "rise" of Silas Lapham and not the "rise and fall." This is among Howells's best novels.


5 out of 5 stars Should be called "The Rise and Fall of Silas Lapham"   March 3, 2005
 15 out of 17 found this review helpful

This book blew my mind! I found it absolutely engaging and the character of Silas Lapham was endearing to the point of surprise. This book says a lot about a class conscious America and even more about how "mom and pop" capitalism gets pushed aside to make way for impersonal mega corporations.
Silas Lapham is a good-hearted, yet rugged individualist who pulled himself up by the bootstraps to make a giant fortune. Once he succeeds however, there is a whole group of people at the top of the ladder ready to push him onto his face, along with his whole "wretched family." No matter what he does to fit in with the "old money" he just can't seem to fit in and the more he works to fit the millionaire mold, the more he compromises his own values.
What's best though is that we see him and his family through good times as well as through the downward spiral after his business crashes, and while it is sad, we see that they return willingly to what once was without coming out any worse.
This book made me smile because the characters, especially Silas Lapham, are realistically flawed and human. I recommend this highly.



5 out of 5 stars A perfectly symmetrical novel -- literally.   December 22, 2004
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

To the page, this book is symmetrical in its structure. It opens with a public confession (to a reporter) and ends with a private one (to a priest). In the exact center comes Lapham's moment of realization when he is drunk at a party. There is more to the structure, but that should be enough to get you going.

A reviewer below calls Lapham a 'mogul with a conscience' which is accurate. The true core of this book is the way Howells carefully built it, though. Considering it comes from an age before modernism, it certainly feels quite modern. Give it a shot.



4 out of 5 stars Mogul with a conscience   March 30, 2004
 20 out of 20 found this review helpful

William Dean Howells's "The Rise of Silas Lapham" is one of the earliest American novels about a businessman, and that qualification alone makes it a literary curiosity, but what is most remarkable about it is what its title character is not, rather than what he is. Silas Lapham is not a ruthless, villainously greedy tycoon who bullies his employees and relishes destroying the careers of his competitors and enemies, but a conscientious, likeable man to whom misfortune happens because of his gullibility and sense of guilt rather than hubris.

Lapham is a human emblem of the new American industrial economy of the 1870s. A self-made millionaire in the paint business, he is now one of the richest men in Boston and is radiantly proud of the fact that he has earned every dollar. Having grown up poor and undereducated in Vermont, he still speaks in a rustic vernacular and has yet to understand the rationale behind the rules of high society, let alone assimilate them. A simple, practical man with a sense of duty, he even put aside his business to serve in the Civil War, in which he was seriously wounded and achieved the rank of colonel. He can be boastful and garrulous, but he is not arrogant or overbearing.

Lapham is dearly devoted to his wife Persis, who in turn has supported him through thick and thin, and his two daughters. Penelope, the older girl, is relatively plain but witty and sardonic and, at least in the first half of the novel, never seems to take anything seriously; her sister Irene is the more beautiful but vapid and superficial. Irene falls for Tom Corey, the young man who comes to work for her father as a foreign sales representative, but Tom and Penelope have a mutual attraction that, Penelope fears, could break Irene's heart. This romantic subplot allows Howells to contrast Tom's family, part of the old Boston aristocracy, with the even wealthier but socially crude Laphams with whose daughter Tom's mother has snobbish doubts about his possible union.

The novel has almost the air of Greek tragedy in that Lapham is a man of stature who has fatal flaws that threaten to destroy him. He is a teetotaller, and when he does take the liberty of trying some wine at a dinner party, he embarrasses himself and his family by talking too much. He abstains from gambling, but, instigated by his former business partner and current gadfly Milton Rogers, he gets into financial trouble when he stakes money on bad property and bad stocks. And, to compensate for a traumatic event in his past, he is charitable almost to a fault to a pretty girl whom he employs as a typist in his office.

The style of "The Rise of Silas Lapham" is a dramatic realism similar to that found in the novels of Howells's contemporaries Frank Norris and Theodore Dreiser; the structure is straightforward, and the dialogue cuts to the core in laying bare the characters' sentiments and unfolding the plot. It may fall short of being a "great" novel, but for its candid portrayal of a specimen of the nouveau riche, it can be considered a minor monument of nineteenth century American literature.

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