THE MICHIGAN DAILY S Thomas Beer Books and Writers P UNDAY OCTOBER 5, 1924. ra long Our Past SAN DOVAL. By Thomas Beer. Knopf. $2u.50. A .)ast is something that the young, being without it, desire and to which the old, of whom it Leas long been an adjunct, become calloused. These States have had a past for some yearsj now, but the fabricators of fiction( have only just tumbled to that knowl- cdge Of course, the various wars of our history have been exploited in cos- tume novels time and again; but it is within recent years that the pastf has been employed for more than ro-i mantic glamour. Joseph Hergesheim-r or was one of the first to make capital' of the early American scene; he ap-r preciated the fact that there were cer- tain forces which existed in the pasti history of our own country, which didI not occur again, and which were gen-r uinely dramatic. It is perhaps not tooI much to hope that such a sense oft perspective in the writers oft a coun-I try point to the beginning of an in-, trins cally national culture, All that has been said of Mr. Herg-I esheimer may be subscribed beneath1 the name of Thomas Beer. In San- dval he has fastened upon the period, following the Civil War and upon an incident arising out of that period and of the two has made a story. Mr. Beer ,is so conscious an artist that he is more aware of it than we and fairly succeeds in distracting our attention from his suave and jewelled periods. Not all this evidence of style is due, however, to careful writing. His m ethod of presentation is implicated. The vehicle of his narrative is the hero's mind; the method is intro- c~cc r.4tn Rczn c nrr mr~na rcnn~~ Ma Jong WITE DRAGONS WILD and HOTW TO WIN AT MA JONG. By Elmer Moe O Malar Dwiggins. Published by Elmer' Dwiggins. $1.00. To those who play Ma Jong this book Pascal Covici (once of Covici-Mc- by Mr. Dwiggins, who is popularly Gee) arnounces for October fifteenth known, he says as Pa Jong Dwiggins, _ The Kingdom of Evil by Ben Hecht. should prove intensely interesting and it purports to be a continuation of the instructive. The author has developed jouralts tazius tatre The what might be termed without exager- journal of Fantazius Mallare. The °il- watmight bne temewthouthy exa lustrations (twelve) are by Anthony ation an entire new philosophy of Ma Angarola and are very weird, if we Jong which may be stated brifly ascangeanrterympeirdtfus. follows:. "Go for the limit hands, and Th dge-lrb t and wort of if you miss them then for the largest The pre-blurb is art and worthy of number of doubles. Be satisfied to lose often, if you can occasionally win Mallare, his brain alive with a lyric- remarkably big hands!" al and poignant hatred of life, writes Dwiggins maintains that the way to the history of his five years beyond win at Ma Jong is to draw to the big the papier-mache boundaries of what hand. He has figured out that the is called Civilization. reason the high hands seem so scarce His Journal, in which his madness .i sings again, in which his snakelike is that people very seldom recognize phrases lash out at the sexual bog them on sight. He has made a neat phrard lash out a h sea table of the Limit hands, indicating eItoward which life draws him, leaves which of them score big even when behind this time, however, the psycho- they fail of completion. This table is logical melodrama which ikatished so arranged as to enable a player to the adventures in the book called recognize the limit hands even when Fantazius Mallare. they occur in some of the more ob- Mallare tells of a strange land to scure forms. He has also included a which he was taken. Here on a vol- neat table showing the advantage of a canic island hidden in a far sea, Dr. solo in cases where the other players Sebastien, a creature with a mon- are playing either skip-duals or con- strous and magical -mild has as secuitve duals or trebles. These sit- sembled a group of three hundred men uations are easily recognizable, of and women stolen from the world. I course, to the skilled player who Here, removed from human ties and watches the discards. Dwiggins ad- corrupting worldly relationships, with vhmorality and all the other apologetic The othier part of the book explains philosophies wiped from the souls of{ aytem otfr playin wth White Dags its inhabitants, flowered a Renais- a system of playing with White Drag-1 sauce, monstrous and incredible; a .sBacchanal of progress which convert- I poker is sometimes played with deuces ed matter into fantasy and changed life wild. The system iswelordou dm well worked-out into a grotesque and scientific dream. technically as is the entire work. The Kingdom of Evil, its spinning windows and floating towers hovering Thomas Boyd's second novel "The over its demoniac streets, filled the Dark Cloud (Scribner's) has gone in- hidden island with the mirage of its to a secdnd printing within a week wonders. of its 'publication. Of this place Mallare writes. Of Kora, the earth woman, for whom Dr. CohcernigTomas Beer Got off by Good Old pseudo-Eliza--; Mary Borden, English, author of Sebastien created the Kingdom. Of bethan Chris Morley in his recent Jane our stranger and a new book to mind-childr RtraigroaJduarnewistok t the men who became beasts and the As Who's Who says, b. Nov. 22, 1889 d be published by Knopf this month, beasts who became men. Of the un- at Council Bluffs, Iowa. (Carl Van- The more existence of newspapers Threo Pilgrims and a Tinker, an- canny orgies with which the new God Vechten, another Westerner who went a proo oth epaiae inst nounces to he wide-wide world that amongmetapasoaeitrs"unetotewd-iewrdht was worshipped. Of his own struggle east, young man, first saw the light in one another which implies that we sex-interest is no longerpredominant with Sebastien for the love of the sui-' of day at Cedar Rapids, Iowa.) He i n nte hc mle htw c-neeti olne rdmnn phurous-eyed and Satanic Kora. And was educated at the Mackenzie school, are all gossips together. Gossips are in the novel of today. D. H. Lawrence, finally of the Debacle, of the night New Haven, and at the Law school at people who have only one relative in copy. when The Kingdom of Evil, like a Columbia. e has been a law clerk, common, but that relative the highest__ _ _ _ possible; namely, God. fire-breathing dragon, slid into the sea first lieutenant in the Field artillery 'Thomas Man, to our mind the best and vanished forever, and on the staff of the 87th Division This is the higher criticism. made.: German writer now being in France during the late war. Hee. era rtr o en In this macabre fantasy Ben Hecht F. He t a-siated, will publish througl Knopf has surpassed the imagery and violent has written for Century, Smart Set John Galsworthy's new novel, "The next string Death in Venice, a short tempo of Fantazius Mallare. The (under the heliogabalan reign of White Monkey," will be published byj novel first appearing in his country Kingdom of Evil is the second volume Mencken and Nathan) and the Satur-' Charles Scribner's Sons on October in Dial. in the Mallare trilogy. Although writ- day Evening Post, among others. ie 24. It reintroduces several characters1- ten in the spirit cf the first it is, how- has published two books (Knopf)- of "The Forsythe Saga." Subscribe for The Michigan Daily ever, complete in itself, its pages r e Fr Rewards a novel, and ~~~~~~~~~~~Stpen Crane, a biography., ________________________________ counting the second of the three dark e r ^^^^^^^y dinm wlih h raint areamsw c ,vrcmIte I ilalare wucn veramethegenius of Mallare. Mary Garden will appear as the Madonna in "The Miracle," at the Century theatre during the last few; weeks of its run there. It is planned to take "The Miracle" to Cleveland sometime in November.: Gil Boag is to open a little theatre somewhere on Park avenue, New York, in which he will foster a little theatre group during the early hours of the evening, and which will serve as sort of cabaret during the rest of the night. Gilda Gray, Mr. Boag's wife, will be the leading attraction after midnight. 67 320 East Liberty Phone 294-Fl Silk; Flannel and Broadcloth SHIR'TS Are Laundered to Your Complete SATISFACTION By the MOE LAUNDRY 204 NO. MAIN STREET PHONE 3i5 I' --- --r, .. .. ^I PATRONIZE DAILY ADVERTISERS ERNST BROTHERS Ao"., i Wahl Pen and Eversharp are obtainable in matched f An unqualified ga rantee stands back of every Wahl product Complete Writing Equipment Side by side in your pocket, Eversharp and Wahl Pen are ever ready to serve your thoughts. Durability and dependability are common qualities of these economical, practical writing companions. The non-clogging rifled tip, quick reloading, and complete interchangeability of parts are among the six new features which make the perfected Eversharp. And the Wahl all-metal Pen is at par with Ever- sharp in giving thorough satisfaction. Light in - weight, perfect in balance, resistant to wear, and beautiful in design-it is the ideal pen. Eversharp, $1 to $45. Wahl Pen, $5 to $55. Made in the U.S.A. byTHEWAHL COMPANY, Chicago Canadian Factory, THE WAHL COMPANY, Ltd., Toronto Manufaaurers of the Wahl Eversharp and the Wahl All-Metal Fountain Pen J The\fewP ERFFCT E D WAffI/3RA~p UWAHI PIWN ELECTRIC SHOP We Have Everything ELECTRICAL Student Lamps, Sockets, Cords, Plugs and All Styles of Light- ing Fixtures. Mazda Bulbs. WE DO Wiring, Fixtures and Appliance and Repair Work 104 Norhi FdurthAve. Co-qsy Corner Tea Room 330 Maynard St. South of May Will Servc a Chicken or Roast Beef Dinner Saturday After the Game PHONE 9'6 From 6 to 7:30 R guishes THE VARSITY LAUN- -DRY SERVICE. Phone 2076 or 2077. I L A Rider's Pen Sho.a The Authorized 0 III i