Despite my fight and the struggles of many others, communist dictatorships have taken over half the world. Meanwhile, for the first time, proud man, dressed with a little brief authority, has so perfected the instruments of destruction that he is in a position to put an end to the possibility of life on our earth and condemn this planet to go its way through infinite space, lonely and forgotten. Whether this will happen depends entirely upon the decision of two men—or possibly on the decision of one of them. Both are known to the world by one initial, “K.” What can a poor fellow whose name happens to begin with “S” do about it? He can only say what he thinks and hope to be heard. He can only go on fighting for social justice and the democratic ideal, hope that man does not destroy himself, by design or by accident, and trust that eventually the peoples of the world will force their rulers to follow the ways of peace, of freedom, and of social justice.
Books by Upton Sinclair
Springtime and Harvest 1901 (Reissued as King Midas 1901)
The Journal of Arthur Stirling 1903
Prince Hagen 1903
Manassas: A Novel of the War 1904 (Reissued as Theirs Be the Guilt 1959)
A Captain of Industry 1906
The Jungle 1906
The Industrial Republic 1907
The Overman 1907
The Metropolis 1908
The Moneychangers 1908
Samuel the Seeker 1910
The Fasting Cure 1911
Love’s Pilgrimage 1911
Plays of Protest 1912
The Millennium: A Comedy of the Year 2000 1912
Sylvia 1913
Damaged Goods 1913
Sylvia’s Marriage 1914
The Cry for Justice 1915
King Coal 1917
The Profits of Religion 1918
Jimmie Higgins 1919
The Brass Check 1919
100%: The Story of a Patriot 1920
The Book of Life 1921
They Call Me Carpenter 1922
The Goose-Step 1923
Hell: A Verse Drama and Photoplay 1923
The Goslings 1924
Singing Jailbirds: A Drama in Four Acts 1924
The Pot Boiler 1924
Mammonart 1925
Bill Porter: A Drama of O. Henry in Prison 1925
The Spokesman’s Secretary 1926
Letters to Judd 1926
Oil! 1927
Money Writes! 1927
Boston 1928
Mountain City 1930
Mental Radio 1930, 1962
Roman Holiday 1931
The Wet Parade 1931
American Outpost 1932
Upton Sinclair Presents William Fox 1933
The Way Out 1933
I, Governor of California—and How I Ended Poverty 1933
The Epic Plan for California 1934
I, Candidate for Governor—and How I Got Licked 1935
We, People of America 1935
Depression Island 1935
What God Means to Me 1936
Co-op 1936
The Gnomobile 1936, 1962
Wally for Queen 1936
The Flivver King 1937
No Pasaran 1937
Little Steel 1938
Our Lady 1938
Terror in Russia 1938
Expect No Peace 1939
Letters to a Millionaire 1939
Marie Antoinette 1939
Telling the World 1939
Your Million Dollars 1939
World’s End 1940
World’s End Impending 1940
Between Two Worlds 1941
Peace or War in America 1941
Dragon’s Teeth 1942
Wide Is the Gate 1943
Presidential Agent 1944
Dragon Harvest 1945
A World to Win 1946
Presidential Mission 1947
A Giant’s Strength 1948
Limbo on the Loose 1948
One Clear Call 1948
To the Editor 1948
O Shepherd, Speak! 1949
Another Pamela 1950
The Enemy Had It Too 1950
A Personal Jesus 1952
The Return of Lanny Budd 1953
What Didymus Did 1955
The Cup of Fury 1956
It Happened to Didymus 1958
Theirs Be the Guilt 1959
My Lifetime in Letters 1960
Affectionately Eve 1961
Index
[A], [B], [C], [D], [E], [F], [G], [H], [I], [J], [K], [L], [M], [N], [O], [P], [R], [S], [T], [U], [V], [W], [Y].
Abbott, Leonard D., [101]
Addams, Jane, [109-10], [213]
Adventures in Interviewing, by Isaac F. Marcosson, [118]
AFL-CIO, [282], [287]
American Civil Liberties Union, [227], [228], [231], [328]
Anderson, Sherwood, [252]
Appeal to Reason (later Haldeman-Julius Weekly), [89], [101-02], [104], [105], [108], [112], [115], [150], [213], [221], [223]
Armour, J. Ogden, [116-17], [139]
Armour, Kathleen, [319], [321]
Armour, Richard, [319], [321]
Atherton, Gertrude, [107]
Babbitt, by Sinclair Lewis, [251-52]
Baby Mine, by Margaret Mayo, [125]
Baldwin, Roger, [227]
Bamford, Frederick Irons, [152]
Barnett, Gen. George, [13], [14]
Barnett, Mrs. George, [13-14], [53]
Barnsdall, Aline, [275]
Barrows, Ellen, [197]
Beall, Rev. Upton, [29]
Belasco, David, [144], [155]
Bellamy, Edward, [269]
Belloc, Hilaire, [181]
Belmont, Mrs. Oliver, [136]
Bennett, James Gordon, [121]
Berger, Victor, [170], [171]
Beveridge, Sen. Albert J., [13]
Bickel, Carl, [255]
Bierce, Ambrose, [44]
Birnbaum, Martin, [56], [294-95]
Björkman, Edwin, [132], [250]
Björkman, Mrs. Edwin (Frances Maule), [132], [250]
Bland, Howard, [93], [227]
Bland, John Randolph, [9], [11-12], [14], [45], [53-54], [63-64], [226-27]
Blatch, Harriet Stanton, [140]
Bliss, Leslie E., [304]
Bloor, Mrs. Ella Reeve, [120-21], [124], [137], [165]
Boston Society for Psychical Research, [33]
Brady, Judge Tom, [259], [260], [316]
Brandeis, Justice Louis, [274]
Brandes, George, [201]
Brett, George P., [114], [212], [214]
Bride of Dreams, by Frederik van Eeden, [184]
Brown, J. G., [37]
Browne, Lewis, [276], [289]
Brownell, W. C., [78]
Buchanan, Thompson, [187]
Buerger, Leo, [158]
Burns, John, [122], [178]
Butler, Nicholas Murray, [60], [61], [83]
Bynner, Witter, [156]
Byrd, Cecil, [304], [305]
California Institute of Technology, [254-55], [257], [258-59]
Camus, Albert, [308]
Cannon, Mrs. Laura, [198]
Carmichael, Bert, [47-48]
Caron, Arthur, [201]
Carpenter, Edward, [203]
Carpenter, Prof. George Rice, [58], [61]
Chandler, Harry, [275]
Chaplin, Charles, [273]
Church of St. Mary the Virgin, [30]
Church of the Holy Communion, [30], [99], [288]
Church of the Messiah, [32], [77]
Churchill, Winston, [121-22]
Clay, Bertha M., pseudonym of John Coryell, [133]
College of the City of New York, [21], [23-25], [37-40], [47], [48], [57], [224], [294]
Collier, Peter, [108]
Collier, Robert F., [108], [136]
Columbia University, [25], [46], [48], [51], [56-63], [65], [66], [86], [131], [132], [224], [244], [250]
Community Church, [32]
Cook, George Cram, [252]
Cooke, Grace MacGowan, [132]
Corydon (pseudonym of 1st wife), [13], [81], [93], [94], [104], [106], [108], [112], [156]
acquaintance of, with Sinclair, [17], [41-42]
advises Mary Craig Kimbrough on her book, [166], [167-68], [172]
and Harry Kemp, [160], [174-75]
courtship of, [75-77]
despondency and loneliness of, [95], [96-98], [111]
divorce of, from Sinclair, [172]
considered by her, [154-55], [165], [170]
granted in Holland, [186]
proceedings in, [175-76], [177-78]
scandal re, [168], [174-75], [178]
fights for custody of son, [210]
financial difficulties during pregnancy of, [79-80]
helps Sinclair write Love’s Pilgrimage, [75-76]
ill-health of, [95], [96], [137-38], [145]
in sanitariums, [138], [160]
leaves Sinclair to live with parents, [83], [86], [91];
to take own apartment, [146]
marriage of, to Sinclair, [77];
opposed by family, [77], [79]
remarries, [169], [210]
returns to Sinclair, [154-55], [165], [173], [210]
son of, see Sinclair, David; birth of, [84]
Coryell, John, [133]
Coughlin, Father Charles E., [273-74]
Crane, Charles R., [215]
Crane, Stephen, [252]
Damaged Goods, by Eugène Brieux, [193]
The Daughter of the Confederacy, by Mary Craig Kimbrough, [166]
Davidson, Jo, [133], [250]
Davis, Jefferson, [166], [205], [265]
Davis, Richard Harding, [204]
Davis, Robert, [117]
Davis, Winnie, [166], [168], [173], [205], [265]
Debs, Eugene, [44], [252-53]
The Defeat in the Victory, by George D. Herron, [102]
Dell, Floyd, [34], [88-90], [99], [204], [261]
Democratic Party, [19], [64], [268], [272], [328]
The Demon of the Absolute, by Paul Elmer More, [85]
Dewey, John, [132], [250]
De Witt, Samuel, [29]
Dill, James B., [144-45]
Dinwiddie, William, [122]
Disney, Walt, [285], [326]
The Divine Fire, by May Sinclair, [182]
Doremus, R. Ogden, [23-24]
Dos Passos, John, [232]
Doubleday, Frank, [124]
Dreiser, Theodore, [45], [85], [246], [247], [249], [253]
DuBridge, Dr. Lee, [258-59]
Duke University, [244], [328]
Duncan, Isadora, [203], [252]
Dunne, Finley Peter, [252]
The Easiest Way, by Eugene Walter, [144]
Einstein, Albert, [254-59], [279-80], [292], [305], [326], [329]
Eisenstein, Sergei, [64], [237], [262-67]
Eldh, Carl, [305]
EPIC (End Poverty in California), [266], [268-76], [278], [280], [282], [309], [319], [321], [328]
Ettor, Joe, [187]
Fairbanks, Douglas, [252]
Faulkner, William, [45]
The Fighting Sinclairs, [4-6]
Finch, Jessica, [194-95]
Fischer, [185]
Fish, Hamilton, [279]
Fitch, Ensign Clarke, USN (pen name of Upton Sinclair), [50]
Fitzgerald, F. Scott, [45], [252]
Flannery, Harry, [282]
Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley, [187]
Ford, Arthur, [245-47]
Ford, Edsel, [285-86]
Ford, Henry, [258], [285], [324-25]
Ford, Mrs. Henry, [286], [287-88], [324-25]
Fox, William, [260-61]
Freeman, Elizabeth, [201]
Fuller, Judge Alvan T., [241]
Fuller, Judd, [234]
Garfield, James R., [118]
Garrison, Lt. Frederick, USA (pen name of Upton Sinclair), [49]
Gartz, Craney, [217], [300]
Gartz, Gloria, [217], [273]
Gartz, Mrs. Kate Crane, [214-18], [219-20], [233], [240], [246], [257], [262], [272-73], [298], [299-302]
Gartz, Adolph, [217], [218], [233]
Genthe, Arnold, [151]
Ghent, W. J., [228]
Gillette, King C., [236-37], [286-87]
Gilman, Elizabeth, [226]
Ginn, Edwin, [93]
Giovannitti, Arthur, [187]
Goebel, George H., [253]
Gold, Michael, [70]
Goldman, Eric, [325]
Gray, Barry, [325]
Gurney, Edmund, [33]
Gutkind, Erich, [184]
Haldeman, Marcet, [213]
Haldeman-Julius, Emanuel, [87], [213], [221]
Haldeman-Julius Little Blue Books, [83], [154]
Haldeman-Julius Weekly (formerly Appeal to Reason), [221]
Hanford, Ben, [220]
Hapgood, Norman, [107]
Hard, Dr. Frederick, [319], [321]
Hard, May (Mrs. Upton Sinclair, his 3d wife), [319-22]
Harden, Harry, [7], [91]
Harden, John S. (grandfather of Upton Sinclair), [7], [9], [10], [29]
Harden, Mrs. John S. (Mary Ayers), [10-11]
Hardy, Prof. George, [38]
Harris, Frank, [169-70], [181-82]
Hartmann, Sadakichi, [133], [250]
Harvard University, [196-97], [241], [242], [244]
Haywood, William D., [187]
Hearst, William Randolph, [50], [133]
Helicon Hall (Home Colony), [128-36], [141], [142], [250]
Hemingway, Ernest, [45], [249-50]
Henderson, C. Hanford, [204]
Henry, O., [44], [252]
Herbermann, Prof. Charles George, [38]
Herron, George D., [93], [101-03], [176], [183], [294]
Herron, Mrs. George (Carrie Rand), [176], [183]
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, [85], [93]
The High Romance, by Michael Williams, [142], [143]
Hitchcock, Ripley, [88]
Hoover, Herbert, [304]
Hopkins, Harry, [274]
Hopkins, Pryns (Prince), [238]
House, Col. Edward M., [218], [221]
Howatt, David, [156-57], [162]
Howe, Frederick C., [203]
Howe, Julia Ward, [93]
Huebsch, B. W., [228], [297]
Huntington Library, [304]
Hyslop, Prof. James, [60-61], [65], [244]
Ickes, Harold, [274]
Industrial Workers of the World, [229], [232], [233], [281-82]
Intercollegiate Socialist Society (later League for Industrial Democracy), [113-14], [140], [170], [172], [194], [196], [197], [248], [282], [329]
Irvine, Alexander, [201]
It All Started with Columbus, by Richard Armour, [319]
It All Started with Eve, by Richard Armour, [319]
It All Started with Marx, by Richard Armour, [319]
James, Henry, [181]
James, William, [132-33], [250]
Jerome, William Travers, [66], [67], [222]
John Barleycorn, by Jack London, [248]
Jones, Capt. and Mrs., [209], [210]
“Jonesy,” fruit inspector, [67-68], [123-24]
Kahn, Otto H., [266]
Kautsky, Karl, [184-85]
Keeley, James, [116]
Kellogg, W. K., [140]
Kelly, Mrs. Edith Summers, [132], [250]
Kemp, Harry, [147-48], [160], [168], [172], [174-75], [178]
Kempner, Dr. Walter, [311]
Kennerley, Mitchell, [167], [176], [186]
Kimbrough, Allan, [259]
Kimbrough, Dolly, [192], [193-94], [208], [246], [254]
Kimbrough, Hunter Southworth, [204-05], [206], [208], [259], [260], [262], [263], [265], [266], [282], [310], [314], [318], [319], [320]
Kimbrough, Judge Allan McCaskell, [180], [186], [188], [190], [193], [195], [200], [204], [205], [206-07], [208], [212], [276-77]
Kimbrough, Leftwich, [315]
Kimbrough, Mary Craig (Mrs. Upton Sinclair, his 2d wife), [184], [186], [193], [194], [195-96], [204-11] passim, [224], [251], [254], [259], [263-65], [277], [279], [281], [286], [293], [307], [309]
and Corydon, [166], [167-68]
and Mrs. Kate Crane-Gartz, [214-18], [219-20], [233], [299-300], [301-02]
and Neil Vanderbilt, [238], [295], [296]
as homemaker, [234], [303]
books by, [166], [167-68], [173], [314], [325]
collaborates with Sinclair on Mental Radio experiments, [33], [243-45], [326];
on revision of King Coal, [212-13]
death of, [317], [318], [319]
during Sinclair’s campaign for Governor, [269], [272], [275], [276], [278]
heroine of Sylvia, [180-81], [195]
in England, [179]
in Holland, [183]
interested in telepathy, [33], [243-47], [328]
last illness of, [300], [301], [310-17]
loved by George Sterling, [172]
marriage of, [188-90];
opposed by family, [186], [188]
meets Sinclair, [161-62]
participates in protest demonstration, [198-202]
persuades Sinclair to change name of socialist society, [282];
to edit King C. Gillette’s ms., [236-37];
to write book on William Fox, [260], [261]
Sonnets to Craig written for, [172-73]
Kimbrough, Mrs. Mary Hunter K., [180],
[186], [188], [190], [191], [192], [195]
Kimbrough, Orman, [276]
Kimbrough, Sally, [318]
Kimbrough, Willie, [208]
Klausner, Bertha, [325]
La Follette, Philip F., [257-58]
La Follette, Robert M., [225]
Laidler, Harry, [113]
Lansbury, George, [193]
The Last Romantic, by Martin Birnbaum, [294]
Lawrence, Mrs. Pethick, [193]
League for Industrial Democracy (formerly Intercollegiate Socialist Society), [113-14], [260], [282], [329]
Ledebour, Georg, [185]
Le Gallienne, Richard, [88]
Leupp, Francis E., [118]
Lesser, Sol, [266], [267], [319], [321]
Letters of Protest, by Mrs. Kate Crane-Gartz, [233]
Lewis, Henry Harrison, [41], [48-49], [50]
Lewis, Lena Morrow, [281]
Lewis, Sinclair, [45], [85], [132], [250-52], [279]
Liebknecht, Wilhelm, [185]
Lilly Library, University of Indiana, [226], [304-06]
Lindsay, Vachel, [203]
Lindsey, Judge Ben, [148]
Lippmann, Walter, [194], [196], [197]
Liveright, Horace, [237], [249], [252]
London, Jack, [44], [113-14], [169], [182], [248], [252]
Lorimer, George Horace, [116]
Lowell, A. Lawrence, [241]
Ludlow massacre, [198-203], [327-28]
McDougall, Prof. William, [244-45], [247], [326], [328]
MacDowell, Edward, [48], [58-60]
MacDowell, Mary, [109]
Macfadden, Bernarr, [157], [158], [159], [232]
MacGowan, Alice, [132]
Mackay, Mrs. Clarence, [136]
Mann, Klaus, [252]
Mann, Thomas, [292-93], [329]
Mann, Tom, [178]
Marcosson, Isaac F., [118]
Markham, Edwin, [85]
Martin, John, [139-40]
Martin, Mrs. John (Prestonia Mann), [139]
Matthews, Brander, [61], [78]
Mayo, Margaret, see Selwyn, Mrs. Edgar
Mead, Edwin D., [93]
Mencken, H. L., [87], [226], [227], [248], [305]
Mexico, Indians filmed by Eisenstein in, [26], [262-67]
Mickiewicz, Ralph, [16]
Milholland, Inez, [8], [170-72]
Millay, Edna St. Vincent, [45], [252]
Millikan, Dr. Robert, [255], [257]
Minor, Robert, [204], [265], [293]
Modern Utopia, by H. G. Wells, [146]
Moir, Rev. William Wilmerding, [30-32], [42], [45-46], [49], [74]
Montague, Lelia, [53]
Montague, Prof. W. P., [131], [132], [250]
Moore, Fred, [241]
Mordell, Albert, [4-5]
More, Paul Elmer, [83-84], [85], [101]
Morgan, J. P., [141-42], [144]
Murphy, Mayor Frank, [287]
Murphy, Tom, [133]
Museum of Modern Art, [267]
Musmanno, Justice Michael Angelo, [242], [324]
Namikawa, Ryo, [328]
Nearing, Scott, [114], [166], [167]
Neill, Charles P., [119]
Neuberger, Sen. Richard, [279]
New York University, [308]
Nobel Prize, [297], [305], [329]
Noyes, Prof. William, [132], [250]
Oaks, Louis D., [228-32]
O’Higgins, Harry, [148]
O’Neill, Eugene, [45], [232], [252]
Oppenheimer, Harry, [319]
Otto, Richard S., [269-70], [275], [309], [319], [321]
Our Benevolent Feudalism, by W. J. Ghent, [228]
Oxford University, [244]
Page, Walter H., [116], [140]
Pankhurst, Sylvia, [193]
Parable of the Water Tank, by Edward Bellamy, [269]
Peck, Harry Thurston, [60], [83]
Perry, Bliss, [82]
Phantasms of the Living, by Edmund Gurney, [33]
Phelps, William Lyon, [61]
Phillips, David Graham, [118-19]
Poling, Daniel A., [299]
Poole, Ernest, [187]
Price, Will, [166]
Prince, Dr. Walker Franklin, [33]
Princeton University, [93], [279]
Pulitzer Prize, [297]
Randall, David, [304], [305]
Ratcliffe, S. K., [294]
Rathenau, Walter, [185-86]
Reed, John, [187], [188], [293]
Reedy, W. M., [44]
Republican Party, [271], [328]
Reuther, Victor, [324]
Reuther, Walter, [323], [324], [325]
Reynolds, James Bronson, [119]
Rhine, Prof. J. B., [247], [328]
Ridgway, E. J., [117]
Rivera, Diego, [262]
Robinson, Prof. James Harvey, [60]
Rockefeller, John D., Jr., [198], [199], [201], [202], [328]
Rockefeller, Nelson A., [202]
Roosevelt, Mrs. Eleanor, [325]
Roosevelt, Franklin D., [268], [271], [274], [279], [296], [298]
Roosevelt, Theodore, [118-19], [124], [327]
Russell, Bertrand, [257]
Russell, Frank, Lord, [179-80], [183], [186]
Russell, Countess (“Aunt Molly”), [179-80], [181], [183], [186]
Rutzebeck, Hans, [321]
Sabin, Barbara, [321]
Sacco, Nicola, [240-42]
Salisbury, Dr. J. H., [162-63]
Sanborn, Frank B., [93]
Santayana, George, [85]
Savage, Rev. Minot J., [32-33], [77], [111], [244]
Schorer, Mark, [250], [251], [252]
Schwed, Fred, [38-39]
Schwimmer, Rosika, [139], [258]
Scott, Leroy, [187]
Scripps College, [319]
Seabrook, William, [252]
The Sea Wolf, by Jack London, [114]
Selfridge, Harry Gordon, [194]
Selwyn, Arch, [125], [285]
Selwyn, Edgar, [125], [203]
Selwyn, Mrs. Edgar (Margaret Mayo), [125], [203]
Shaw, George Bernard, [106], [146], [182], [192], [285], [292], [305], [329]
Shaw, Mrs. George Bernard, [193]
Shelburne Essays, by Paul Elmer More, [84]
Sinclair, Capt. Arthur (grandfather of Upton Sinclair), [4], [5], [6], [191]
Sinclair, Comm. Arthur (great-grandfather of Upton Sinclair), [5], [191]
Sinclair, Arthur, Jr., [6]
Sinclair, Mrs. Arthur (grandmother of Upton Sinclair), [4]
Sinclair, David (son of Upton Sinclair), [84], [91], [94-95], [96], [104], [112], [138], [142], [154], [163], [165], [166], [176], [177], [179], [185], [189], [192], [195], [204], [210], [323], [324]
Sinclair, George T., [5], [6]
Sinclair, George Terry, [6], [25]
Sinclair, May, [182-83]
Sinclair, Priscilla Harden (Mrs. Upton, mother of Upton Sinclair), [3], [6-7], [8], [9], [14], [15], [17], [19], [24], [28], [29], [34], [36], [41], [42], [50], [59], [65], [69], [77], [79], [91], [189], [191], [235], [289]
Sinclair, Upton
acting company organized by, [153-54]
and Inez Milholland, [170-72]
and Protestant Episcopal Church, [29-33], [99-100], [288];
Unitarian Church, [32], [288]
arrested for playing tennis, [168];
for protest demonstration, [199-200];
for reading U.S. Constitution, [228]
as candidate for Congress, [105];
for Governor of California, [266], [268-76], [278]
as election watcher, [66-67]
as producer of Eisenstein’s film, [262-67]
as reporter for N. Y. Evening Post, [42-43]
at City College, [21], [23-25], [37-40], [47], [48], [57], [224], [294]
at Columbia University, [48], [51], [56], [57-63], [224], [244]
attends British Parliament to hear debate, [178-79]
biographer of, see Dell, Floyd
biography of, published, [99]
birthplace of, [226]
card-playing by, [92]
childhood of, [3], [7-12], [14-28]
collaborates with Michael Williams on health book, [142-43]
confirmation of, [30], [288]
declines appointment to U.S. Naval Academy, [25]
divorce of, [168], [174-75], [175-76], [177-78], [183], [186], [189]
early education of, [8-9], [21-25]
edits King C. Gillette’s ms., [236-37]
estimate of works of, [88-90], [292-93], [308-09], [327-30]
family of
account re members of, in the Navy, [4-6]
aunts, [3], [11], [13], [15], [29], [53]
cousins, [13], [14], [53], [93], [104], [191], [227], [285]
father, see Sinclair, Upton Beall
grandfathers, [4], [5], [6], [7], [9], [10], [29], [191]
grandmothers, [4], [10-11], [29]
granduncles, [5], [6]
mother, see Sinclair, Priscilla Harden
son, see Sinclair, David
uncles, [6], [7], [8], [9], [11-12], [14], [25], [45], [53-54], [63-64], [78], [79], [91], [191], [226-27]
wife, see Corydon; Hard, May (3d wife); Kimbrough, Mary Craig (2d wife)
helps launch Nietzsche cult in America, [87]
Home Colony of, [128-36]
ill-health of, [73], [87], [125], [137], [140-41], [155], [158], [237], [294];
and consequent interest in special diet, [140-41], [153], [157-60], [162], [163], [311], [312-13], [322]
interested in foreign languages, [61-63], [167], [235], [288];
in law, [25], [48];
in mental telepathy, [33], [243-47], [326], [328];
in music, [56-57], [71], [77], [79], [234]
lecture tour by, [278-82]
literary hoax by, [88]
marriage of, [77], [188-90], [321]
method of working of, [94]
newspaper guild formed at suggestion of, [224]
organizes protest demonstration, [198-203], [327-28]
pen names of, [49], [50]
papers of, given to Lilly Library, [226], [304-06]
prizes of: Nobel Prize sought for him, [305], [329];
Page One Award, [323];
Pulitzer Prize, [297];
Social Justice Award, [324-25]
reading habits of, [8-9], [20], [32], [47], [48], [53-54], [57], [62-63], [86], [87]
residences of, and visits by, in:
Adirondack Mts., [41-42], [55], [56-57], [87], [138-40], [144-46], [318]
Arden, Del., single-tax colony, [164-67], [173], [196-97]
Arlington, Cal., [300]
Baltimore, [3-4], [9], [16], [45], [53-54], [226-27]
Battle Creek, Mich., [140], [158-61]
Bermuda, [141-42], [195-96]
Bishop, Cal., [149-50]
Boston, [92-93], [224], [240], [243]
Buckeye, Cal., [310], [311]
Butte, [279]
Carmel, Cal., [146], [150-51], [152-53], [155]
Coconut Grove, Fla., [155-56]
Chautauqua, N.Y., [279]
Chicago, [109-10], [147], [224], [225-26]
Claremont, Cal., [321]
Corona, Cal., [300], [311-16] passim
Coronado, Cal., [212-13]
Croton-on-Hudson, [108], [203]
Cutchogue, L.I., [156]
Denver, [148], [241]
England, [8], [178], [192], [193]
Fairhope, Ala., single-tax colony, [162-64]
Florence, [176-77]
Florida, [112], [155-56]
Germany, [177], [184-86], [192]
Halifax, [104]
Holland, [177], [183]
Key West, Fla., [155]
Lake Elsinore, Cal., [301]
Lake Placid, [74]
Lawrence, Kan., [147]
Long Beach, Cal., [243-47], [270]
Los Angeles, [228-32], [253]
Miami, [155-54]
Milan, [177]
Mississippi, [204-10]
Monrovia, Cal., [297], [301], [303-04], [310], [316]
Naples, [62-63]
New York City, [8], [16-27], [29-52] passim, [57-67], [74], [77-80], [83], [91], [101], [113], [115], [116], [123], [125], [135], [170-71], [173], [174-76], [186-89], [191-92], [196-202], [224], [249], [253], [322-24], [325]
Oakland, [151], [152], [280]
Ogden, Utah, [148]
Ontario, [68-69], [106-07]
Paris, [192-93]
Pasadena, [11], [213-23] passim, [233-38], [248], [251], [254-70] passim, [297], [310], [317]
Pawlet, Vt., [36-37]
Phoenix, [310-11]
Point Pleasant, N.J., [135]
Portland, Ore., [279]
Princeton, [94-95], [96-97], [105], [110-17] passim, [119], [259], [279-80]
Quebec, [71-74], [76], [318]
Reno, [148-49]
St. Louis, [279]
San Bernardino, [321]
Santa Barbara, [13-14]
Seattle, [278]
Switzerland, [177]
Thousand Islands, [48], [80-82], [86]
Trenton, [125]
Virginia, [14-15], [189-90]
Washington, D.C., [118-19]
Wisconsin, [225]
resigns from Socialist Party, [217], [268-69]
sonnet to, [174]
supports American participation in World Wars I and II, [217], [218], [257-58], [299]
tours the U.S., [224-27], [278-82]
urges Henry Ford to start a magazine, [286]
views of
on drinking, [6-7], [43], [44-45], [248-53], [328]
on fame, [122-23]
on his accomplishments, [327-30]
on inadequacy of American education, [61-62], [85], [224-25], [227], [235], [280]
on marriage, [75]
on natural beauty, [54-56], [72]
on New York State divorce laws, [175-76]
on religious beliefs and practices, [29-33], [37], [38], [99-100], [272], [282-84], [288]
on sex education, [28-29], [46-47], [240]
on social, economic, and political issues, [9-10], [12], [25], [26], [29], [40], [43], [44-45], [46], [49], [64], [65], [70], [73], [99], [100], [101], [105-06], [107-08], [113-14], [118-21], [123], [124-25], [126], [128], [133-34], [178-79], [180-81], [187], [209], [210], [216], [228-32], [235-36], [286], [329-30]
on writing, [51-52], [58], [71], [72], [73-74], [84], [241]
writings of
After the War Is Over (play), [306]
Another Pamela, [298], [306], [326]
Appomattox, [92]
Bill Porter (play), [306]
The Book of Life, [47]
Boston, [242], [243]
The Brass Check, [108], [121], [187], [222-24], [235], [305], [323], [327]
A Captain of Industry, [91]
Caradrion (blank-verse narrative), [83]
Cicero: A Tragic Drama...., [248], [306-09]
The Coal War, [214], [217]
“The Condemned Meat Industry” (essay), [117-18]
The Convict (play), [306]
Co-op (play), [280-81], [306]
The Cry for Justice: An Anthology of Social Protest, [203], [326]
The Cup of Fury, [252], [328]
Damaged Goods (based on Brieux’ play), [193], [195]
Depression Island (play), [273], [306]
Doctor Fist (play), [306]
Dragon’s Teeth, [297], [326]
The Emancipated Husband (play), [306]
The Enemy Had It Too (play), [306]
“Farmers of America, Unite” (manifesto), [105]
The Fasting Cure, [160]
Flivver King, [282], [287], [324], [325]
Gettysburg, [92]
A Giant’s Strength (play), [297], [306]
The Gnomobile (children’s story), [284-85], [326]
The Goose-Step, [224], [227], [235]
The Goslings, [227], [235]
The Grand Duke Lectures (play), [306]
The Great American Play, [306]
Hell (play), [232], [306]
“I, Candidate for Governor—and How I Got Licked,” [278]
The Indignant Subscriber (play), [154]
The Industrial Republic, [108], [133]
Jimmie Higgins, [220]
John D. (play), [154], [306]
The Journal of Arthur Stirling, [74], [87-89], [90], [92], [101], [103]
The Jungle, [13], [67], [85], [109-10], [111-12], [114-19], [120], [122], [136], [137], [140], [145], [164], [196], [204], [213], [282], [323], [325];
dramatization of, [125-26]
King Coal, [208], [212], [214], [282]
King Midas (reissue of Springtime and Harvest), [80], [82], [85-86]
“Language Study: Some Facts” (article), [85]
Letters to Judd (pamphlet), [235]
Limbo on the Loose (pamphlet), [300]
Love in Arms (play), [306]
Love’s Pilgrimage, [43], [44], [46], [75], [83], [84-85], [90], [92], [164], [167], [176]
The Machine (play), [156], [306]
Mammonart, [87], [235]
Manassas: A Novel of the War (reissued as Theirs Be the Guilt), [92], [93], [94], [103], [104], [107], [108], [326]
Marie and Her Lover (play), [289-90], [306]
Mental Radio, [33], [243-45], [326]
The Metropolis, [9], [136-37], [138], [139], [140], [141], [144], [146]
The Millennium (play), [142], [144], [155], [306]
Money Writes!, [235-36]
The Moneychangers, [144], [145], [146], [156]
The Most Haunted House (play), [306]
My Lifetime in Letters, [251]
The Naturewoman (play), [164], [306]
Oil! (play), [107], [118], [139-40], [243], [306]
O Shepherd, Speak!, [298]
Our Lady (novelette), [288-89];
play, [326]
The Overman (novelette), [83]
The Pamela Play, [306]
A Personal Jesus, [298], [326]
Plays of Protest, [164]
The Pot Boiler (play), [306]
The Prairie Pirates, [41]
Presidential Agent, [296]
Prince Hagen, [82], [83], [95], [103];
play, [153], [306]
The Profits of Religion, [30], [143], [223], [235], [272]
The Return of Lanny Budd, [299]
“A Review of Reviewers,” [85]
Roman Holiday, [247-48]
The Saleslady (play), [306]
Samuel the Seeker, [157-58]
The Second-Story Man (play), [154], [306]
Singing Jailbirds (play), [232], [306]
Springtime and Harvest (reissued as King Midas), [71-72], [77-79], [80], [85-86], [93]
Sylvia, [180-81], [195]
Sylvia’s Marriage, [187]
“Teaching of Languages” (article), [85]
Theirs Be the Guilt (reissue of Manassas, q.v.), [326]
“The Toy and the Man” (essay), [104]
Upton Sinclair Presents William Fox, [258], [261]
Upton Sinclair’s (magazine), [218-21], [234], [291]
Wally for Queen (play), [285], [306]
The Wet Parade, [17], [44], [248]
What Didymus Did, [298]
What God Means to Me, [282]
World’s End, [192], [265], [297], [326]
articles, essays, reviews, etc., [59], [83], [85], [88-90], [96], [105], [107], [109], [123], [128], [167], [184], [232], [246]
“Clif Faraday” stories, [50-51]
early writings, [33-36], [39-40], [41], [42], [47], [48-52], [68]
first story, [36];
novel, 41 (unpublished), [77-79], [80]
health book written in collaboration, [141-42]
“Lanny Budd” books, [192], [228], [265], [291-98], [299], [305], [326], [328], [329]
“Mark Mallory” stories, [49-51]
novel based on his experiences with Socialist Party, [220]
novel based on Sacco-Vanzetti case, [240-42]
open letter protesting unjust arrest, [228-31]
plays, listed, [306]
Sinclair, Mrs. Upton, see Corydon (1st wife); Hard, May (3d wife); Kimbrough, Mary Craig (2d wife)
Sinclair, Upton Beall (father of Upton Sinclair), [4], [6-7], [8], [9], [14-15], [19-20], [24], [29], [36], [43-45], [91], [248], [251]
Sinclair, Dr. William B., [5-6]
Sinclair, William B., Jr., [6]
Sinclair, William H., [6]
Sinclair Lewis, by Mark Schorer, [250-52]
Slosson, Edward E., [140]
Smith, Adolphe, [110]
Smith, Alfred E., [22]
Smith College, [164]
Social Redemption, by King C. Gillette, [236]
Socialist Party, [114], [166], [170], [216], [217], [220], [252], [266], [268]
Sonnets to Craig, by George Sterling, [172-73]
Southern Belle, by Mary Craig (Kimbrough) Sinclair, [200], [314], [325]
Stalin, Joseph, [265]
Stedman, Edmund Clarence, [76], [106]
Stedman, Laura, [76]
Steffens, Lincoln, [107-08], [115], [222], [294], [300]
Stephens, Donald, [165], [166]
Stephens, Frank, [164-65], [167]
Sterling, George, [44], [146], [150-52], [172], [200-01], [202], [203], [248], [252]
Stern, Simon, [33], [41], [49]
Stokes, James Graham Phelps, [140], [204]
Stokes, Mrs. James Graham (Rose Pastor), [140]
Strong, Anna Louise, [293]
Südekum, David, [185]
Taft, Rev. Clinton J., [231]
Tammany Hall, [19], [29], [37], [45], [64], [65], [66-67], [123], [133], [222]
Tarver, John Ben, [308-09]
Teachers College, [132], [250]
Thirty Strange Stories, by H. G. Wells, [146]
Thomas, A. E., [204]
Thomas, Augustus, [204]
Thomas, Dylan, [45], [252]
Thomas, Norman, [113], [266]
Thompson, W. G., [241]
Thunder Over Mexico, film by Eisenstein, [262-67], [319]
Thyrsis, see Sinclair, Upton
Tibbs, Taylor, [17]
Trent, Prof. W. P., [58], [61]
Tresca, Carlo, [187]
Trinity Church, [30]
Two Tears on the Alabama, by Arthur Sinclair, Jr., [6]
United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, [11], [226]
University of Chicago, [225-26]
University of Indiana, [226], [304-05], [306]
University of Kansas, [174]
University of Pennsylvania, [166]
University of Wisconsin, [225]
Untermyer, Samuel, [144], [222-23], [224], [305]
Updegraff, Allan, [132]
Vanderbilt, Cornelius (“Neil”), Jr., [238], [295-97]
Van Eeden, Frederik, [157], [177], [183-84]
Vanzetti, Bartolomeo, [240-42]
Villard, Oswald Garrison, [228], [259-60]
Volker, pen name of Erich Gutkind, [184]
Wagner, Rob, [246], [287]
Wallace, Mike, [325]
Walter, Eugene, [144]
Ware, Hal, [165-66]
Warfield, Wallis, [285]
Warren, Fiske, [196-97]
Warren, Gretchen, [197]
Warren, Fred D., [108-09], [114-15]
Waterman, Maj., [16], [18-19]
Wayland, J. A., [150], [213]
Webb, Gen. Alexander S., [24]
Weeds, by Edith Summers Kelly, [132]
Weisiger, Col., [16-17], [30]
Wells, H. G., [145-46], [181], [183], [221], [329]
Wendell, Barrett, [85]
Wheeler, Edward J., [80]
Whitaker, Robert, [157]
White, Matthew, Jr., [36]
Whitman, Walt, [203]
Williams, Albert Rhys, [292], [301]
Williams, Sen. John Sharp, [218-19], [221]
Williams, Michael, [132], [141-44]
Wilshire, Gaylord, [101-04], [135], [136], [146], [149-50], [178], [183], [223]
Wilshire, Mrs. Gaylord (Mary), [104], [183]
Wilshire’s Magazine, [101], [150]
Wilson, Stitt, [281]
Wilson, Woodrow, [218-19], [294]
Wood, Clement, [201], [202-03]
Wood, Eugene, [163]
Woodberry, George Edward, [60]
World Corporation, by King C. Gillette, [236]
Yale University, [132], [250]
Young, Art, [232]