Question of the day: did Sinclair Lewis anticipate our time by writing a novel that is suddenly back in the news?
"It Can't Happen Here" was published in 1935. Today, in a story in the Wall Street Journal, it's ranked first on a list of the best five political conspiracy novels ever published.
This is how John Miller describes "It Can't Happen Here" at the Corner on National Review online:
"A charismatic Democratic senator who speaks in 'noble but slippery abstractions' is elected president, in a groundswell of cultish adoration, by a nation on the brink of economic disaster.
"Promising to restore America's greatness, he promptly announces a government seizure of the big banks and insurance companies. He strong-arms the Congress into amending the Constitution to give him unlimited emergency powers. He throws his enemies into concentration camps.
"With scarcely any resistance, the country has become a fascist dictatorship.
"No black helicopters here, though. Sinclair Lewis's dystopian political satire, now largely forgotten except for its ironic title, was a mammoth best seller in 1935, during the depths of the Depression and the rise of fascism in Europe.
"His president, Berzelius ("Buzz") Windrip, is a ruthless phony with the 'earthy sense of humor of a Mark Twain'; one of the few who dare oppose him openly is a rural newspaper editor who is forced to go on the run.
"Lewis's prose could be ungainly, but he captured with caustic humor the bumptious narrow- mindedness of small-town life."
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