The novel follows the adventures and misadventures of the main character, Eliph' Hewlitt, who is a book agent. Eliph' Hewlitt is known for his peculiar and comical personality, and the novel delves into his escapades as he navigates the world of book sales and encounters various eccentric characters.
The story is structured as a comedic love story, with Eliph' Hewlitt finding himself entangled in romantic entanglements while pursuing his career as a book agent. The novel combines humor, romance, and satire as it explores the ups and downs of Eliph' Hewlitt's life.
Ellis Parker Butler's writing style is characterized by its wit and humor, and "Kilo" is no exception. The novel is filled with humorous situations, quirky characters, and clever wordplay, making it an enjoyable read for those who appreciate comedic literature.
While "Kilo" is not as well-known as some of Ellis Parker Butler's other works, it is a testament to his talent for blending humor and satire to create entertaining and amusing stories.
If you enjoy lighthearted and comedic novels that offer a satirical look at the quirks of human nature and society, " Being the Love Story of Eliph' Hewlitt, Book Agent" is a book worth exploring. It provides a humorous and entertaining glimpse into the world of book sales and the humorous trials and tribulations of its protagonist.
Ellis Parker Butler was an American author. He was the author of more than 30 books and more than 2,000 stories and essays. His career spanned more than forty years, and his stories, poems, and articles were published in more than 225 magazines.
Ellis Parker Butler (1869-1937) was a contemporary of many big names in American fiction straddling the 19th and 20th centuries, but today he's almost completely forgotten. (Maybe that's because he was only a part-time writer with a day-job as a banker. His short bios at the University of Iowa Press and Des Moines Register are worth checking.)
This is the second book by Butler that I've read in the last month or so. I liked it better than the previous one and you might, too, in part because it contains no bothersome racial/ethnic stereotypes that might be objectionable for many modern readers. (Or at least none that I noticed.) And the humor in this one holds up pretty well; it's quite middle-American. It was originally published in 1907, but I read the Project Gutenberg e-book edition.
The plot centers around Eliph' Hewlitt, a travelling book salesman of the horse-and-buggy era, who is constantly pitching Jarby's Encyclopedia of Knowledge and Compendium of Literature, Science, Art, which is a thick, single-volume storehouse containing everything, as you can imagine. He arrives in Kilo, Iowa, during a church picnic and promptly runs across the girl of his dreams, Sally Briggs. He decides on the spot to marry her, and settles down in Kilo, peddling books to the locals. But Sally will have nothing to do with book agents, in part because she still owes for a previous edition of five volumes and can't get any more money from her cantankerous father for such frivolous items, so she avoids Eliph' assiduously...
The comic adventure involves a lot of fire-extinguishers, local graft, the newspaper printer, and various other people of importance in the tiny town. Along the way, we meet several amusing individuals to whom Eliph' is trying to sell his one-volume encyclopedia. My favorite vignette is a longish conversation about reincarnation and marriage and all that, between Hewlitt and the doctor's wife.