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John Dos Passos
 
1896 - 1970

One of Chicago's most famous novelists, John Dos Passos was born here in 1896. He attended Harvard University, graduating in 1916. Like several other well-known writers of his generation, he volunteered in World War I before the US entered the war. The next time the United States went to war, Dos Passos served as a war correspondent for Life Magazine in the Pacific and South America. The observation and writing skills he learned as a reporter came through in his fictional works; in fact, critics have sometimes even faulted him for being too objective.

Critics count Dos Passos among America's greatest writers, but many note a decline in the artistic quality of his work over time. While Sinclair Lewis hailed "Manhattan Transfer" as one of the most important novels ever written, works from later in Dos Passos's life have been greeted with less enthusiasm. His most contentious work is the trilogy "USA," a novel of protest with a distinct tone that is difficult to pin down.

Dos Passos was somewhat radical in his youth - among other political activities, he founded the publication "New Masses" in 1926. But he became more conservative as he grew older. Some critics have said that his political transformation was less a shift in ideology than a changing manifestation of his lifelong belief in rugged American individualism. He wrote several books about one of his personal heroes, Thomas Jefferson.

Works:

  • One Man's Initiation, 1917
  • Three Soldiers, 1921
  • A Pushcart at the Curb, 1922
  • Rosinante to the Road Again, 1922
  • Streets of Night, 1923
  • Manhattan Transfer, 1925
  • Orient Express, 1927
  • Facing the Chair, 1927
  • Manual Maples Arce Metropolis, 1929
  • 42nd Parallel, 1930
  • Panama, 1931
  • Nineteen Nineteen, 1932
  • In All Countries, 1934
  • Three Plays, 1934
  • The Big Money, 1936
  • Journeys Between Wars, 1938
  • Adventures of a Young Man, 1939
  • The Ground We Stand On, 1941
  • Number One, 1943
  • State of the Nation, 1944
  • First Encounter, 1945
  • Tour of Duty, 1946
  • The Grand Design, 1949
  • USA, 1950
  • Chosen Country, 1951
  • District of Columbia, 1952
  • Most Likely to Succeed, 1954
  • The Head and Heart of Thomas Jefferson, 1954
  • Men Who Made the Nation, 1957
  • Great Days, 1958
  • Midcentury, 1961
  • Mr. Wilson's War, 1962
  • Brazil on the Move, 1963
  • Occasions and Protests, 1964
  • Thomas Jefferson: The Making of a President, 1964
  • The Portugal Story: Three Centuries of Exploration and Discovery, 1964
  • The Shackles of Power: Three Jeffersonian Decades, 1966
  • The Best Times: An Informal Memoir, 1966
  • The Theme is Freedom, 1970
  • Afterglow and Other Undergraduate Writings, 1990

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