The Adventures of Augie March

It features the eponymous Augie March, who grows up during the Great Depression, and it is an example of Bildungsroman, tracing the development of an individual through a series of encounters, occupations and relationships from boyhood to manhood.Augie, with his brother Simon and the mentally abnormal George have no father and are brought up by their mother, who is losing her eyesight, and a tyrannical, grandmother-like boarder, in very humble circumstances in the rough parts of Chicago.After the fiasco in Mexico, where he suffered a terrible accident on a horse, he and Thea began drifting apart; he spending his time playing cards and she hunting for snakes and lizards in the mountains.After rescue, he returns to Stella and the book ends with them living a slightly dubious existence in France, he involved in some fairly shady business deals and she attempting to pursue a career in acting."[5] He is given a background common of protagonists in inspirational American stories; "he comes from a poor family; he does not know the identity of his father; he refuses to be trapped by fine clothing, social position, or wealth,"[6] and he has plenty of "heroic qualities" such as his intelligence, compassion, and clear observation.
Saul BellowPicaresque novelBildungsromanViking PresshardcoverpaperbackDewey DecimalLC ClasseponymousGreat DepressionNational Book Award for FictionModern LibraryChicagoMexicoCongress of Industrial OrganizationsNew YorkFranceAmerican literaturebest in the history of TIME, 1923 to 2005editorial board's 20th-century hundredThe Adventures of Huckleberry FinnMoby-DickThe Catcher in the RyeAugie MarchFionn ReganBrandon CronenbergAntiviralThe New York TimesNational Book FoundationThe NationTwayne PublishersUniversity of Massachusetts PressDangling ManThe VictimSeize the DayHenderson the Rain KingHerzogMr. Sammler's PlanetHumboldt's GiftThe Dean's DecemberMore Die of HeartbreakA TheftThe Bellarosa ConnectionThe ActualRavelsteinBibliographyThe Man with the Golden ArmNelson AlgrenCollected Stories of William FaulknerWilliam FaulknerFrom Here to EternityJames JonesInvisible ManRalph EllisonA FableTen North FrederickJohn O'HaraThe Field of VisionWright MorrisThe Wapshot ChronicleJohn CheeverThe Magic BarrelBernard MalamudGoodbye, ColumbusPhilip RothThe Waters of KronosConrad RichterThe MoviegoerWalker PercyMorte d'UrbanJ. F. PowersThe CentaurJohn UpdikeThe Collected Stories of Katherine Anne PorterKatherine Anne PorterThe FixerThe Eighth DayThornton WilderJerzy KosińskiJoyce Carol OatesThe Complete StoriesFlannery O'ConnorChimeraJohn BarthAugustusJohn WilliamsGravity's RainbowThomas PynchonA Crown of Feathers and Other StoriesIsaac Bashevis SingerDog SoldiersRobert StoneThe Hair of Harold RouxThomas WilliamsWilliam GaddisThe Spectator BirdWallace StegnerBlood TieMary Lee SettleGoing After CacciatoTim O'BrienSophie's ChoiceWilliam StyronThe World According to GarpJohn IrvingThe Stories of John CheeverRabbit Is RichSo Long, See You TomorrowWilliam MaxwellThe Color PurpleAlice WalkerThe Collected Stories of Eudora WeltyEudora WeltyEllen GilchristWhite NoiseDon DeLilloWorld's FairE. L. DoctorowPaco's StoryLarry HeinemannParis TroutPete DexterSpartinaJohn CaseyMiddle PassageCharles JohnsonMatingNorman RushAll the Pretty HorsesCormac McCarthyThe Shipping NewsE. Annie ProulxA Frolic of His OwnSabbath's TheaterAndrea BarrettCold MountainCharles FrazierCharming BillyAlice McDermottWaitingHa JinIn AmericaSusan SontagThe CorrectionsJonathan FranzenThree JunesJulia GlassThe Great FireShirley HazzardThe News from ParaguayLily TuckEurope CentralWilliam T. VollmannThe Echo MakerRichard PowersTree of SmokeDenis JohnsonShadow CountryPeter MatthiessenLet the Great World SpinColum McCannLord of MisruleJaimy GordonSalvage the BonesJesmyn WardThe Round HouseLouise ErdrichThe Good Lord BirdJames McBrideRedeploymentPhil KlayFortune SmilesAdam Johnson The Underground RailroadColson WhiteheadSing, Unburied, SingThe FriendSigrid NunezTrust ExerciseSusan ChoiInterior ChinatownCharles YuHell of a BookJason MottThe Rabbit HutchTess GuntyBlackoutsJustin Torres