Thursday, July 16, 2026

Sinclair Lewis - Elmer Gantry

Sinclair Lewis' Elmer Gantry is a delightfully cynical black comedy. It is also a book very much for our times. The eponymous Elmer Gantry is a happy go lucky young man, brought up in a stifling religious home, but now at college he's a partying, womanising and drinking law student. Realising that becoming a lawyer is hard work, and will likely keep him poor, he decides on a different course of action. Confounding his critics - the hardworking and deeply religious students around him - he heads to a Baptist College where he begins his planned ascent through religious bureacracy to make his fortune, strip the gullible masses from their wealth and sleep with as many attractive parishioners as possible.

When it was first published Elmer Gantry scandalised the good Christian folk of the United States. Small wonder really. Gantry is a lying, swindling, blackard. He is not afraid to dump his friends, betray his flock, and commit adultery. Indeed he happily changes churches, not out of actually religious fervour, but because he sees better chances of enriching himself. Gantry isn't lazy. He's perfectly happy to seep himself in religious works to better understand his place. He just doesn't believe any of it.

Perhaps his worst habit is the way his infatuation with young women leads eventually to boredeom and betrayal - and then abandonment. The only case where this bucks the trend is his encounter with the evangelist Sharon Falconer, to whom he seems genuinely committed - at least to the extent of only creaming off some of the cash, and only having one brief affair. 

Gantry's rise and fall, then rise and further rise, is the story of an obsessive and clever swindler. But it is also the story of hypocritical 1920s America when the church was happy to sell love, truth and future happiness for a decent enough donation in the collecting tray. The only difference Lewis says, is that Gantry is the most extroverted at it. He's also very good, and ambitious. The rest of the Church hate him but his gilded tongue, superb sermonising and his ability to cover his tracks usually gets him through.

HG Wells apparently wrote an article on America based in part on Lewis' descriptions in this book. While Wells probably ought to have done more first hand research, Elmer Gantry feels very much like its based on real people. Indeed Lewis lived with various preachers, went to multiple religious services on a daily basis for months, to research the background to the book. One of those whom he lived with was a preacher determined to show Lewis that his portrayal of priests and preachers in early books was deeply inaccurate. One can only imagine how he felt (and sermonised) about what Lewis did with his hospitality.

It is alleged that Lewis wrote much of the last chapters of the book in a deep alcoholic hole. If that's true than I didn't really find the book any worse for it. Indeed, the ending spoke very much to 21st century America. Lewis is a fine observer of the dirt beneath America's surface.

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