The Job: An American Novel by Sinclair Lewis

(7 User reviews)   1248
By Casey Marino Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Wit & Irony
Lewis, Sinclair, 1885-1951 Lewis, Sinclair, 1885-1951
English
Ever feel like your job is slowly swallowing your soul? That's the exact trap Una Golden walks into in Sinclair Lewis's 1917 novel 'The Job.' Forget the dry office dramas you know—this is the raw, early-20th-century story of a young woman who moves to New York, desperate for independence and a paycheck. She lands a secretarial position, thinking it's her ticket to freedom. But Lewis shows us the hidden cost. The book follows Una as she navigates a world where her value is measured in typing speed, where ambition in a woman is seen as odd, and where the daily grind threatens to erase her dreams. It's not about one villainous boss; it's about the entire system designed to keep her in her place. If you've ever clocked in and wondered, 'Is this all there is?' this century-old story will feel shockingly familiar. Lewis captures that quiet desperation of modern work life before it was even called 'modern.'
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Sinclair Lewis is famous for books like Babbitt and Main Street, but The Job hits a different nerve. It's one of the first major American novels to put a working woman's daily life front and center.

The Story

The story follows Una Golden from her stifling small-town life to the big city of New York. She needs work to survive, and she finds it in the booming world of business offices. She becomes a secretary, a respectable job for a woman at the time. But the respect is thin. Lewis takes us through her days: the tedious tasks, the condescending male bosses, the low pay, and the constant pressure to be efficient, cheerful, and invisible. We see her struggle to keep her spirit alive as the routine wears her down. The plot isn't about a single dramatic event; it's the slow accumulation of a thousand small indignities. It's about her fight to be seen as a person with ideas, not just a pair of hands that can type.

Why You Should Read It

What stunned me is how current it feels. Swap the typewriter for a laptop and the dictation for endless emails, and Una's struggles are ours. Lewis nails the soul-crushing parts of office culture—the pointless busywork, the politics, the feeling that your job owns you. He makes you root for Una, not because she's perfect, but because her desire for a meaningful life is so human. You feel her frustration when her ambitions are patted on the head and dismissed. Reading this in the 21st century, you realize how many of these workplace battles are still being fought. It gives you a deep appreciation for how far we've come, and a sharp eye for the ways we haven't moved an inch.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for anyone who's ever had a 'just a job' job. It's for readers who love character-driven stories and social history that doesn't read like a textbook. If you're a fan of authors who capture the texture of everyday life, like Theodore Dreiser or even modern writers focusing on work culture, you'll find a kindred spirit in Lewis here. It’s not a light, happy read—it's a thoughtful, sometimes frustrating, and brilliantly observant look at the American workplace through the eyes of a woman trying to find her place in it. A true classic that still has plenty to say.



✅ Public Domain Content

This work has been identified as being free of known copyright restrictions. Access is open to everyone around the world.

Thomas Martinez
4 months ago

From the very first page, the character development leaves a lasting impact. I couldn't put it down.

Susan Miller
1 year ago

Beautifully written.

4
4 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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