The lottery win is not a blessing but a curse, proving that in a Naturalist universe, blind luck often dictates a person’s ruin.
descends into pathological greed, hoarding her gold coins while her husband starves. McTeague
McTeague (1899) is Frank Norris’s masterpiece of American Naturalism, a gritty exploration of human degradation set against the fog-shrouded streets of late 19th-century San Francisco. The Plot: A Descent into Animalism The lottery win is not a blessing but
Though it shocked contemporary readers with its violence and "sordid" details, McTeague remains a landmark of American literature. It was later adapted by Erich von Stroheim into the 1924 silent film Greed , widely considered one of the greatest—and most ambitious—motion pictures ever made. The Plot: A Descent into Animalism Though it
The novel concludes with a harrowing sequence in Death Valley. McTeague, having murdered Trina for her gold, is hunted down by Marcus. In their final struggle, McTeague kills Marcus, only to realize his victim has handcuffed them together. The book ends with McTeague stranded in the salt flats—rich with gold, but doomed to die of thirst next to a corpse. Key Themes