16, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE BOO K P A 0 SUCKOW Her Latest Work Is Seen As A Possible Best Seller The Folks, by Ruth Suckow: Farrar and Rinehart, $3.00. 'Distilled, Her Wine' HO OVER" . Call For Freed In 'The Challen The Challenge to Liierzy. By Herbert Hoover. Scribner's. $1.75. :-: - __ C _ __1 - 1 A MAN CALLED CERVANTES By KENNETH PARKER I 4 This most, recent work of Ruth Suckow's may, like her other novels, r." .: be criticized for a lack of story and for a lack of colorful style. Suckow is a realist and one that has deter- mined that life is a drab bowl of pig's :...., knuckles. The Folk-, while not the EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY great American novel that its pub-es____________ lishers claim it to be, is on the other hand not a book without interest and one which may become a best seller. This book is interesting because it lviIL L A Y gets at the essence or psychology of human relationship in a sympa- thetic and understanding way, and is November Supplants April wide in appeal because it deals with In Latest Offering the Ameican family from grand- father down to little Buster, from the Of Poetess beginning of this century to the pres-. ent. As a result American families Wine From These Grapes, by Edna will be anxious to read about them- St. Vincent Millay. Harper. $2. selves and see how nearly Suckow, has reproduced them. And most; By D)OROTHY GIES American families will be satisfied be Even to the most devout Millay cause when they finish the book they followers, Wines From These Grapesi can truthfully say, "My, but that's must prove something of a disap-I true to life!" pointment. The apex of perfection The Fergusons live in Iowa. Mr. reached in The Fatal Interview was Ferguson is a reserved sort of person, evidently too high a plane to main- a banker who was brought up on tain; certainly these succeeding verses a farm and still has the habit of get- fall short of the polished and mature ting up early in the morning. Mrs. brilliancy of the preceding volume. Ferguson likes to entertain the club, Miss Millay seems to nave distilled and is a bit. bewildered by her own her wine from the acid essences of children. She has four. The first is resentment, bitterness and ennui. Carl, undoubtedly the best charac- Nementassupprnes Ari;en terization in the book. He is called November has supplanted April; and "The Good Son," and the title fits epitaphs, love poetry. There are but since that is precisely what he is. He few traces in this new volume of the is popular in high school, plays foot- poignant sweetness and the wild, ball and what not and comes to thinl splendid passions that lifted her he must excell in everything and that earlier verses to the rank of genius. he must please his folks. He goes off One mistrusts the pseudo-resignation to school, comes back and marries the of the lines from one sonnet: girl he is expected to and proceeds. "I dread no more the first white in to. follow the advice of his grand- my hair, father: "A good home, and a good Or even age itself..." wife, a partner in your joys and sor- For it is above all a brooding over rows." He settles down to superin- loss of youth that seems to run tending high schools. through the volume like the recurring Margaret and Dorothy are the two notes in a fugue: daughters. Margaret "is so dark" and "He is not made like crooked me, Dorothy "is so fair." Margaret is the Who cannot rise nor lift my head, introvert, jealous of the attention her And all because what had to be sister receives. Dorothy is serene and Has been, what lived is dead." can say "I don't know" vaguely and Her pristine warmth and emotional get away with it. Dorothy marries a vigor have disappeared, arid the handsome man and goes off to Cali- verses are fraught instead with an fornia to live. Margaret goes to Man- intellectual coldness of approach. hattan and becomes a married man's One misses the delicate precision mistress. of color and tone that dictated the Bunny, the youngest and the most jewelled lines of her best works. Only worldly wise of all, marries a Rus- at intervals is the old grace recap- sian girl who is a communist, disap- tured, in "The Fawn," "Sappho pointing his good Republican par- Crosses the Dark River," "Valentine." e-ts to be sure, and one or two others. Too often In the end all the children fall the verse is regraded by an offensive below expectations, even Dorothy and forced attempt at originality whom the folks thought was leading that conjured up, for instance, wild an ideal life in California until they carrot and onion blossoms as images visited her. On page 726 the reader of a woman's beauty. finds Mr. Ferguson hoping the chil- To be sure Miss Millay retains her dren will do as well as he did, and facility in verse technique. Her on the last page, 727, Mr. Ferguson mastery of the sonnit form is again takes an attitude of resignation and marked in the new sequence, "Epitaph finishes the book as he reaches for on the Race of Man." Unfortunately, his wife's hand and says: Well, the external perfection is only a shell for a group of pessimistic and not By PROF. EVERETT S. BROWN of the Political Science Dept. In this book Mr. Hoover develops and expands a thesis which he had proposed in a small volume entitled Anrican Individualism, published in 1922, namely, the giving to each indi- vidual an equal chance for develop- ment of the best in him. This can be accomplished, according to Mr. Hoo- ver, only if Liberty is preserved. What does Mr. Hoover mean by Liberty? He defines it as "a thing of the spirit - to be free to worship, to think, to hold opinions, and to speak without fear -,free to challenge wrong or oppres- lions with surety of justice." Nor is this all. Liberty means further that the individual "must be free to earn,j to spend, to save, to accumulate prop- erty." Intellectual and spiritual free- doms cannot thrive without economicj freedoms, he maintains. This is the Liberty which Mr. Hoo- ver finds challenged from abroad by Socialism, Communism, Fascism and Naziism, and at home by National Fiction Choices Of Authors And Critics The following are recent works of fiction liked best by 52 leading authors and critics: SO RED. THE ROSE. By Stark Young. Scribner. $2.50. GOODBYE MR. CHIPS. By James Hilton. Little, Brown. $1.25.' THE GOLDEN VANITY. By Isa- bel Paterson. Morrow. $2.50. SEVEN GOTHIC TALES. By Isak i Dinesen. Smith & Haas. THE FOLKS. By Ruth Suckow. Farrar & Rinehart. $3. APPOINTMENT IN SAMARRA. By John O'Hara. Harcourt, Brace. $2.50. COLD JOURNEY. By Grace Zar- ing Stone. Morrow. $2.50. FEBRUARY HILL. By Victoria I Lincoln. Farrar & Rinehart. $2.50. FONTAMARA. By Ignazio Sil- one. Smith & Haas. $2.50. FORTY DAYS OF MUSA DAGH. By Franz Werfel. Viking. $3. THE FOUNDRY. By Albert Halp- er. Viking. $2.50. too consequential portraits of the race and its extinction. Again and again in such lines as "This toothy gourd, this head emptied of all," Miss Millay repeats the inevitable theme, "Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him well." Against war she inveighs with a rankling bitterness. Her "Apos- trophe to Man" is the most effective of the group on this theme.I Austere, grave, elegiac in quality, the new volume shows little of the spontaneous intensity of the old Millay. Her "candle burned at both ends," she seems unable to forsake' the desolation of its ashes for newer fires. HERBERT C. HOOVER Regimentation. Co-operation is es- sEcntial to Liberty, but it must be co- operation through consent among free men, not the compulsion of regi- mented men. Leadership there must am n ounded .The Viking Press will celebrate its vantes," a biographical novel by tenth anniversary during 1935, and Bruno Frank. It will be published on ge To Liberty the books for the anniversary year Jan. 3. Later in the month there will have been chosen with special care be a new novel, "Journeyman," by be, but real leadership can be found ftorepresent the varied tastes and in- Erskine Caldwell, author of "God's o terests of the Press. The first of j Little Acre." only by competition, and not through governmental bureaucracy. Regimentation, argues Mr. Hoover. means the daily dictation by Govern- C H R ISTMAS GiFTS mnent of how men are to conduct theirCHST AGI S daily lives, which constitutes to hisMACE mind. "the most stupendous invasionM TCHED of the whole spirit of Liberty that the PEN AND PENCIL SET nation has witnessed since the days of Colonial America." It is not an Sheaffer and Wahl Eversharp emergency program which Mr. Hoover of a new social philosophy in Amer- . V 1 ican life in conflict with the primary concepts of American Liberty. Regi- Inentation, in other words, abandons Liberty for governmental dictation. J To those who would ask Mr. Hoove!. what alternative program to the Newl STAT ION ERY Deal he would have offered, his reply is found in his claim that the depth /fakes An Ideal Christmas Gift. of the depression had passed in the summer of 1932 and that the election of that year' "brouglht a break in the' 50c to . 6.OO march of confidence and recovery." The solution of the nation's difficul- ties, he holds, cannot be achieved by 'Lin it can come only through the STATIONERS, PRINTERS, BINDERS constructive forces based on Liberty. Phone 4515 OFFICE OUTFITTERS 112 So. Main This is an issue which history will decide. r iI } BEST SELLERS OF THE WEEK I' So RED THE ROSE. Young $2.50 LAMI IN His BOSOM. line Miller. $2.50 By Stark By Caro- EXPERIMENT PHY. H. IN AUTOBIOGRA- G. Wells. $4.00 WINE FRom THESE GRAPES. Edna St. Vincent Millay $2. THE CHALLENGE To LIBERTY. Her bert Hoover. $1.75 CANTERBURYTALES. 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