U.S.A. trilogy

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The U.S.A. Trilogy is the major work of American writer John Dos Passos. It comprises the novels The 42nd Parallel (1930), 1919 (1932), and The Big Money (1936), which were published together as one novel cycle in 1938. Dos Passos used an experimental technique in this trilogy, incorporating fictional realism, newspaper clippings, biography and sections of autobiographical stream of consciousness to paint a vast and colorful landscape of American culture during the first decades of the twentieth century.

Dos Passos' trilogy relates the lives of many characters as they struggle to find a place in American society during the early part of the twentieth century. Each character is presented to readers from their childhood on, and although many of his sections are quite short, one of the successes of Dos Passos' style is that readers feel they are reading about the whole life of a character. Interspersed with the fictional sections about his characters Dos Passos has included sections of biography and autobiography; and he has interpolated newspaper clippings and song lyrics. Dos Passos titles his autobiographical sections The Camera Eye, the sections of headlines Newsreel, and has individually labeled each short biography.


John Dos Passos Novels
The Scene of Battle | One Man's Initiation: 1917 | Three Soldiers | A Pushcart at the Curb | Rosinante to the Road Again | Streets of Night | Manhattan Transfer | Facing the Chair | Orient Express | The Ground we Stand On | Chosen Country | Most Likely to Succeed | The Head and Heart of Thomas Jefferson | The Men Who Made the Nation | The Great Days | Prospects of a Golden Age | Midcentury | Mr. Wilson's War | Brazil on the Move | The Best Times: An Informal Memoir | The Shackles of Power | The Portugal Story | Century's Ebb: The Thirteenth Chronicle | Easter Island: Island of Enigmas
U.S.A. Trilogy: The 42nd Parallel | Nineteen Nineteen | The Big Money
District of Columbia: Adventures of a Young Man | Number One | The Grand Design