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From his Vermont farmhouse, a novelist imagined a fascist takeover of America [View all]
https://vtdigger.org/2025/07/20/then-again-from-his-vermont-farmhouse-a-novelist-imagined-a-fascist-takeover-of-america/Mark Bushnell
Sinclair Lewis drew from national and international headlines, but set most of the story among the green valleys of his adopted home state.

Sinclair Lewis wrote It Cant Happen Here in less than two months during the summer of 1935 while at his summer residence in Barnard. Photo via the New York Public Library
Nobel Prize winning author Sinclair Lewis sequestered himself on his Vermont farm during the summer of 1935 and hammered away on his latest novel. He was in a hurry, fearing that real-world events might overtake his narrative.
For his plot, Lewis drew from national and international headlines of the day, but he made the main character a Vermont newspaper editor and set most of the story among the green valleys of his adopted home. For 12 hours a day, seven days a week, Lewis plotted his story and then tapped it out on his portable typewriter, before making copious handwritten revisions to the text. He finished the 498-page manuscript on August 13. It told a story sure to grab the publics attention.
The resulting book, It Cant Happen Here, was an instant bestseller. It tells the dystopian story of a populist American politician, Berzelius Buzz Windrip, who stokes peoples fears and preys on their patriotism, promising sweeping reforms to return the country to its original values. Windrip defeats Franklin Roosevelt in the Democratic primary and is then elected president. Once in power, Windrip leads a fascist takeover of the United States. He declares martial law to neutralize Congress, which had refused to pass his legislation, and disempower the Supreme Court, which could have blocked his decrees. Windrips violent paramilitary force, the Minute Men, suppresses opposition. Windrip seizes control of the media in a way that makes it appear the country still has a free press; he censors some journalists while co-opting others to spread his propaganda.
In 1935, Lewis, like many Americans, was alarmed by the rise of fascism in Europe, led by Adolf Hitler in Germany and Benito Mussolini in Italy. Lewis was well informed about the situation, hearing firsthand details from his wife, famed journalist Dorothy Thompson, who had been a correspondent in Germany. Thompson had interviewed Hitler when he was still aspiring to power and wrote a dismissive profile. Hitler didnt forget the slight. After he became German chancellor, he had Thompson expelled from the country.
. . .
For his plot, Lewis drew from national and international headlines of the day, but he made the main character a Vermont newspaper editor and set most of the story among the green valleys of his adopted home. For 12 hours a day, seven days a week, Lewis plotted his story and then tapped it out on his portable typewriter, before making copious handwritten revisions to the text. He finished the 498-page manuscript on August 13. It told a story sure to grab the publics attention.
The resulting book, It Cant Happen Here, was an instant bestseller. It tells the dystopian story of a populist American politician, Berzelius Buzz Windrip, who stokes peoples fears and preys on their patriotism, promising sweeping reforms to return the country to its original values. Windrip defeats Franklin Roosevelt in the Democratic primary and is then elected president. Once in power, Windrip leads a fascist takeover of the United States. He declares martial law to neutralize Congress, which had refused to pass his legislation, and disempower the Supreme Court, which could have blocked his decrees. Windrips violent paramilitary force, the Minute Men, suppresses opposition. Windrip seizes control of the media in a way that makes it appear the country still has a free press; he censors some journalists while co-opting others to spread his propaganda.
In 1935, Lewis, like many Americans, was alarmed by the rise of fascism in Europe, led by Adolf Hitler in Germany and Benito Mussolini in Italy. Lewis was well informed about the situation, hearing firsthand details from his wife, famed journalist Dorothy Thompson, who had been a correspondent in Germany. Thompson had interviewed Hitler when he was still aspiring to power and wrote a dismissive profile. Hitler didnt forget the slight. After he became German chancellor, he had Thompson expelled from the country.
. . .
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From his Vermont farmhouse, a novelist imagined a fascist takeover of America [View all]
erronis
Jul 20
OP
An important book and a good read. I've thought of it for years, since Reagan and "W".
SharonAnn
Jul 20
#3
Yes - the ultra-conservative group that put Reagan in the White House started the ball rolling
FakeNoose
Jul 20
#7
It's not as if we weren't warned. There is nothing innovative about the Trump team's tactics.
Midnight Writer
Jul 20
#4
Thank you for that reference. I've enjoyed London's novels and haven't read this one.
erronis
Jul 20
#6