Picture of author.

John Uri Lloyd (1849–1936)

Author of Etidorpha The End of Earth

27 Works 233 Members 6 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: John U. Lloyd

Image credit: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress)

Series

Works by John Uri Lloyd

Etidorpha The End of Earth (1895) 166 copies
Red Head (1903) 9 copies
Scroggins (1904) 7 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1849-04-19
Date of death
1936-04-09
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Occupations
pharmacist
chemist
author
Organizations
Lloyd Library and Museum

Members

Reviews

Oddly haunting book about a forced journey into the interior of the earth. Very long winded, 1/3 story to 2/3's lecture on science, metaphysics, dangers of alcoholism etc. Tough to dig through but interesting.
 
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wreade1872 | 3 other reviews | Nov 28, 2021 |
I read this as part of my project to read novels set in or near my hometown of Cincinnati; "Stringtown" is a fictionalized version of Florence, Kentucky, about 12 miles away from Cincinnati, and 26 miles from where I grew up. A few scenes are set in Cincinnati, as the protagonist goes to UC for chemistry classes. It's set shortly after the Civil War, and I gather was very popular in its day. (Lloyd wrote a further five novels about the denizens of Stringtown.)

It's also inexplicably boring. People just talk and talk about stuff that doesn't matter; there's no coherence to this thing, and when there is, half of it is in terrible black dialect, so it's virtually unreadable. I got bogged down in this book for months. Tons of side-stories that go nowhere, a main plot that borders on the incomprehensible, a romance you won't give two shits about. I regret slogging through to the end.… (more)
1 vote
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Stevil2001 | Jun 12, 2020 |
I had to give it 3 stars because this particular edition was missing a chapter and had the same chapter twice. As for the story itself it was great. Some of the dialogue had a Socratic element to it, and it kind of had a reverse "Cave Allegory" twist to it, rather than finding further light outside of the depths of the cave, the sought further light starting from the surface and descending deeper. This book was littered with Masonic symbolism which I obviously love. Would definitely read it again just to pick up on some of the allegorical symbolism that I likely missed.… (more)
 
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JCNeuman | 3 other reviews | Feb 8, 2018 |
Don't recall much of it...
 
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Georges_T._Dodds | Mar 29, 2013 |

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Associated Authors

Bushnell Illustrator
J. H. Beal Editor
Reginald B. Birch Illustrator
J. Augustus Knapp Illustrator
Corinne C. Trimble Illustrator
Mrs. John Uri Lloyd Photographer, Photo Illustrations

Statistics

Works
27
Members
233
Popularity
#96,932
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
6
ISBNs
36
Languages
2
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs