Dragon's Teeth (novel)

Dragon's Teeth (novel)

The novel Dragon's Teeth, written in 1942 by Upton Sinclair, won the Pulitzer Prize for the Novel in 1943. Set in the period 1929 to 1934, it covers the Nazi takeover of Germany during the 1930s.

It is the third of Upton Sinclair's World's End series of eleven novels about Lanny Budd, a socialist, art expert, and "Red" grandson of an American arms manufacturer.

Back of the novel (1968 reprint):

The Pulitzer prize-winning novel by a great American writer portrays the men and women caught in an onslaught of terror, a holocaust from which few escape.
Lanny Budd became involved in what the Nazis termed "politics." He saw it as a question of human decency–that was how he found himself the prey in a manhunt as horrifying as it was deadly. Lanny Budd was one of those millions engulfed in the century's tragedy, trapped by the rising monster of Nazi Germany.
"Mr. Sinclair rises to the full fictional possibilities of his material... a sincere and brave performance." The Times
"Few works of fiction are more fun to read; fewer still make history half as clear, or as human." TIME
"Sinclair's finest." The New York Times

Read more about Dragon's Teeth (novel):  Plot

Famous quotes containing the words dragon and/or teeth:

    Come not between the dragon and his wrath.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    Dead mountain mouth of carious teeth that cannot spit
    Here one can neither stand nor lie nor sit
    There is not even silence in the mountains
    But dry sterile thunder without rain
    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)