A Review-and Addenda (By G.D. E) But the sad fact must be told. Bjlrk- the senile Brander Matthews who said ought to heave Bjrkman's novel into seldom that any writer has man is neither Englishman nor Amer- that Ludwig Lewisohn was refused a the gutter with Lewisohn's book and ael stortof an oy' ife ican. He was born in Sweden and job at Columbia not because he was a the works of Joseph Conrad. Sa real story of a boys fifelived there for twenty-five years. . Jew but because he had not learned '- to Edwin Bjlrkman's "The It is in Sweden, in fact, that the English at his mother's knee, and so, Last week I offered criticism a Child" (Knopf) no writerin story is located, but I see no essential I suppose, when all is said and done, I (Continued on Page 8) a has done a decent job of it. difference between a Swedish boy and .r Lee Master in "Mitch Miller" an American boy from what I read of ly has come nearer to it than Bj6rkman's book. Indeed, his book is her and his book is almost ad- the only one I have read with the A litl farther ly an attempted improvement of power of setting my own younger days Twain's "Huckleberry Finn." sharply before me with all my secret perhasG but the ss. While "Huckleberry Finn" the ague and wondering notions and e x t r a serlice Tom Sawyer" are admittedly conjectures of boyhood. Jens Peter makes it worth id books, especially in giving us Jacobsen, another Scandinavian, o Y I B. Lor, tang and taste of mid-west- started to do this feat with his -"Niels o h e of several decades ago, still it Lyhne" but before the job was more be recognized that they do not than well on the way the boy grew tell more than half of a boy's up. id it must be recognized fudther BjirkmasI covers the life of a boy rhile giving a dealistic pictude from the age of five to the age of fi- as he went, Mark Twain built teen. A tremendous undertaking, but eries o improbable adventures he does it with the utmost artistry andtate ,pped them with the convention- truthatelling. Starting from the time et ending. It is too bad that he when the boy, Keith Wellander, knew Mrain at Washington not tell the story as he might the world as a cheap and shoddy for Mark Twain was, at bottom, apartment with a glimpse now and ist. But he had to live and thus then of men rolling kegs from a brew- ame more or less of a popular ery across the street, he brings him _ his irony peeped from between up through various stages to the time of humor written to please the of leaving school and going to work. Fa-Simile Display of a Famous Diamond and professors. It "was not But the history of the lad is not so after his death that "Whatnis important. The real accomplishment THE GRAND DUKE OF TUSCANY was published, a terrific and is in exposing the reactions of the rful book, a volume that little boy, his constant store of surprises, OWNED BY CHARLES THE BOLD of electrified the, boobery, a vol- his feelings as he confronts each prob- a Milan Soldier, hat made evident that Twain's lem. How Bjorkman did this is en- Loot in a Battle at Milan and Fod by i it weapon was a tremendously tirely beyond me. All the old im- - Later the Property of Pope Julis It. sword rather than a puffed blad- pulses, hidden in memory cells and WEIGHT 139l% CARATS I lament that he never had the long forgotten, came back to me in . e to use the sword while he poignant fashion as I read the story. WATCH OUR WINDOWS NIGHTLY FOR Avid and consuming curiosities, lit- OTHER HISTORICAL DISPLAYS OF FAMOUS DIAMONDS urnng to the boy-theme, I do tle burning animal fires of sex, secret call any other story in this and forbidden practices, unexpected ry that approaches the three reproofs, degrees of responsiveness to "-- mentioned, and certainly noth- various older persons, hero-worship of SCHLANDERER & SEYFRIED the kind really worth while has. other boys, desires and dissatisfac- Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry and lone in England for a very long tions,-all the things that taunt and Silverware Thackeray's "Henry-Esmond" please and torture the boyish mind, 113 East Liberty Street iously a heap of mush and prob- discoveries ithat girls are different, ie poorest thing that Thackeray That his father is rot the president of rote in the way of a novel. the bank but the janitor, the reading .C of a cheap and moralizing sex book ' 5o-rF 5-- - - --. iing down to present-day Eng- which the parents had hidden behind 'riters, I find but one book con- r;ther books, and the consequent mn- sg a boy that interests me. It is tal agony over his "vices," undeserved .'a::::a" ""'I' Walpole's "Jeremy." It is ex- scoldings and sharp words from his . egly good, but being limited to father, misunderstood apprehensions ear o a boy's life and to a period of his mother, the winning of a prize hs rly for the boy to discover the at school, snubbings from youthful BLUEBIRD TEARLS and hypocrisies of his parents aristocrats, and so on, and so on. It is - for happins ;rown-ups in general, it does not ll tihere, painted in colors that ought much in the way of puerile evo- to bring back the past, even to a dean. PEARL TAiC LSSEL 1" That the novel is largely biographi- AND ling has done some fairly good cal, even to details, can scarcely be . s with boys, but he glosses over doubted. For instance, in the story, ' PEARL BRACELETS ouch and spoils the rest with the boy's name is Keith. The book ex- novel plots. "Kim" is without plains that his mother had been in * The Parisian Fad that ; the best boy-creation by Kip- England and had given the boy an is Sweeping the Country English namoe. Bjlrkman's first name n comes Bjorkman, and if he does is Edwin. Other little parallels bob25° to 12 0 ° } ord it over the whole outfit, then up. 2 . t ---2::":.each I be consigned to the Epworth The book is very well written and pp1 F. e for the rest of my natural life, probably will be a pain in the side of J O H N B. E I B L E R 5 314 South Main Street :.< I SCHLANDERER & SEYFREID 113 East Liberty Street . 9 99 T A X I ANN ARBOR 35 CENTS 999 TAXI