THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 5, 1D35 . 11N THE WORLD OF BOOKS Altruistic Publishers Are Not \A/QLFE:Paints A Picture Of Restless America . Napoleon's Letters Prove An Antidote To His Biographies Disappointed By Twin Novels NOT FOR HEAVEN. By Dorothy McCleary. HUNGRY MEN. By Edward Anderson. Doubleday- Doran. The story goes that a certain pub- lisher in altruistic mood, decided to offer $1,000 in addition to royalties for the best -novel submitted by an author, male or female, who previous- ly had contributed to the magazine. Story. Manuscripts came in large num- bers, the judges retired into the cus- tomary huddle, and in the end there was deadlock. So the publisher be- came twice as altruistic as formerly, and gave each of the authors $1,000. They issued the novels as literary twins-and here they are. Dorothy McCleary's is called Not For Heaven. It is the story of a highly exasperating old lady, which of of course leads to comparison with Victoria Lincoln, even with G. B. Stern. Miss McCleary need not suf- fer thereby. Her story has not, per- haps, the elasticity and broadly gen- eral application to Miss Lincoln's im- mortal February Hill, but Mrs. Bost- wick is an old woman who deserves to live a long time in the minds of grateful readers. She has three enduring passions: Ned, her old horse; Earl, her son, and Mame, who was a girlhood friend. She is as hard to manage as a thunder storm, as Etta, her long- suffering daughter could prove. She detests the soft little Chicago girl her son married, and she has the preacher praying for her salvation through chapters and chapters. There are innumerable gems - Etta, the preacher and Mrs. Bostwick at table; Mrs. Bostwick dosing Ned the horse; Mrs. Bostwick cutting down the ivy. Whereas Mr. Anderson's contribu- tion is another of the books about the down and out - a young musician this time. It has its numerous mer- its, but it seems a little dilute beside such things as Tom Kromer's Waiting For Nothing. And we can't get the suspicion out of our head that the name of the hero, Acel, is a pun on the German word for "ass." FARRELL Third Book Of Trilogy Is Photographic But Art Nevertheless JUDGMENT DAY. By James T. Far, rell. Vanguard. For some years Mr. Farrell has been laboring on a trilogy which should express his youthful obser- vations. The Young Manhood of Studs Lonigan was the first novel. Young Lonigan was the second. Now there is Judgment Day. Mr. Farrell was a boy in a Catholic neighborhood of South Chicago. So was Studs. Studs progressed from back lot baseball through the pool rooms into various minor rackets. He worked on occasion, and had a great deal of fun with girls, and some pretty tough experiences. In Judgment Day he even makes and loses a little money. Then he falls in love with Cather- ine, and gets in trouble at the same time. Studs has not taken very good care of his health, among other things, but when trouble descends; he starts looking for work anyway. And because he is fundamentally de- cent and loves Catherine in his thwarted and twisted way, he goes to his prie-t with her and confesses, and plans marriage. . But it just happened to rain the day he was looking for work, and Studs caught a cold. And that was the entrance of death into the Loni- gan household. Mr. Farrel's story is still bitterly true. The shock of his unvarnished English is not so great in Judgment Day as it was earlier in the trilogy. But the shock of his truthfulness is just as great. Judgment Day is photographic, to be sure. But some learned somebody wrote, just the other day, that pho- tography is at last an art. OF TIME AND THE RIVER. By Thomas Wolf. Scribner's. $3. By PROF. EARL LESLIE GRIGGS (Of The English Department) Coleridge remarked of Shakespeare that his judgment was commensurate with his genius. After reading Of Time and the River, I cannot say as much for Thomas Wolfe. That he has genius and grandeur of concep- tion no one will deny; but he lacks that fine sense of unity, that ability to distinguish the significant from the unimportant, which the really great artist possesses. When I had completed a hundred or so of the 912 pages of this slowly- moving novel, I felt that Mr. Wolfe was attempting to interpret American life. I felt, too, that after I had fin- ished the book (a task accomplished. by sheer determination to discover just what the author had to offer) I should have some sense of twentieth century America. Confused as my impressions were (after these hun- dred pages) I hoped that order would be the final result. I have not been disappointed. Now that I have finished the novel, the vigorous pictures of rushing, restless, reckless America, out of which a few characters, like Eliza Gant and Abe Jones, spring into defined clearness, the sense of lost virtues supplanted by new standards, the tragedy of na- tional futility -- these are unmistak- able. But the order is not Mr. Wolfe's; it must be achieved by the reader. Like life itself, this magnifi- cent novel, with its lack of selection and central theme, is chaotic. Yet Mr. Wolfe bears some resem- blance to the only poet to catch the spirit of "these states." Walt Whit- man's Leaves of Grass deals not mere- ly with the eastern border, but with all America, from coast to coast. De- tail is subordinated to purpose, and even the long catalogues fit into a noble conception. Of Time and the River spreads itself too far. We are led down too many blind alleys. There- are too many characters intro- duced, only to be forgotten. The de- scriptions are too long. Hero and author are too often confused. Yet like Walt Whitman's, Mr. Wolfe's grasp is all embracive. Like Glen-. dower he can "call up spirits from the vasty deep." Later, when Mr. Wolfe has learned that what is of interest to him may not be so to others, when he has learned to select his materials, he is bound to produce a really great novel. Of Time and the River is autobio- graphical. It deals with the struggles of Eugene Gant (a thin disguise of the author) to find himself as a dra- matist. We follow Eugene to Har- vard; we see him quickly outgrow the capacity of a dramatic school and his instructor; we go home with him to Carolina, to turn away from a family addicted to a mild form of Babbitism; we share his experiences as an harrassed English instructor in a New York college; finally we ac- company him to Europe, to see the full fruition of his temperamental waywardness. It is an old theme set against a new background. I urge everyone to read Of Time and the River. Mr. Wolfe's descrip- tive power, his acute sensitiveness to human beings as they are, good and bad, his emotional exuberance-these make the book good reading. And after you have read the book, when you can look back upon it, as upon an experience in life, and can your- self see its really notable passages, you will agree, I think, that it is a work of genius. TH.E STAGE By PROF. HERBERT A. KENYON( THE UGLY RUNTS. Robert Ray- C ;he DANCE NAPOLEON'S LETTERS TO MARIE LOUISE. With a foreword and commentary by Charles de la Ron- ciere. Farrar & Rinehart. Like many other men of genius, Napoleon was rather a dull letter writer. The 300 letters discovered in the archives of a certain Austrian family and recently bought for the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris prove that a mind occupied with juggling armies in the face of death does not necessarily strike fire when turned to the composition of letters'to the wife at home. Oddly, that was exactly what Marie Louise was to Napoleon - the wife at home. He married her with the consent and connivance of the Em- press Josephine because he wanted the heir Josephine could never give him. He found her attractive- when he met her, after marrying her by proxy. When he left her in Paris to Local Best Sellers FICTION ROLL RIVER. By James Boyd. Scribner's. $2.75. HOUSE OF EARTH. By Pearl S. Buck. Reynal & Hitchcock. $3.75. GREEN LIGHT. By Lloyd C. Douglas. Houghton, Miff lin. $2.50. LIGHT FROM ARCTURUS. By Mildred Walker. Harcourt, Brace. $2.50. OF TIME AND THE RIVER. By Thomas Wolfe. -Scribners. $3. A FEW FOOLISH ONES. By Gladys Hasty Carrol. MacMil- lan. $2.50. NON-FICTION THROUGH SPACE AND TIME. By Sir James Jeans. MacMil- lan. $3. NAPOLEON'S LETTERS TO MA- RIE LOUISE. Farrar-Rinehart. $3. THE CURTAIN FALLS. By Jos- eph Verner Reed. Harcourt Brace. $2.75. HINDENBERG. By Emil Ludwig. Winston. $3.50. FIFTY YEARS A SURGEON. By Robert T. Morris. Dutton. $3.50. RATS, LICE AND HISTORY. By Hans Zinsser. Little, Brown. $2.75. go on one or another of his cam- paigns, he wrote her exactly the sort of letter that a prosperous traveling salesman might write his wife. t The letters (excepting a few at the beginning and end of Napoleon's Let- ters to Marie Louise, published today) run thus: I am at such and such a place, doing such and such things. I feel pretty well, and hope you are well. Have such and such done, and if possible write your father and de- mand, suggest, or implore (depending on the state of Napoleon's fortunes at the moment) that he do this or that. Kiss my son for me. Without the running comment of Charles de la Ronciere, only the most learned historian could read much between the lines - how sometimes Napoleon is using his empress as buf- fer, sometimes is broken hearted at reports of her infidelity, sometimes is concealing truth from the nation through her. The letters come as a good antidote to such books as Ludwig's biography. And the last letters, from Elba, do have their poignancy. Doubleday, Doran announces the publication of Harvest, a series of childhood memories by Selma Lager- lof. Miss Lagerlof, who is now 77 years old, is a former recipient of the Nobel Prize for literature and was the first woman to attain that dis- tinction. The translation from the original Swedish was done by Flor- ence and Naboth Hedin, HEADQUARTERSFOR EUROPEAN TRAVEL The Most Complete L ENDNG LIBRARY in Ann Arbor This Week's Feal'ure- "OF T 'IME AND THE RIVER" By THOMAS WOLFE WITHAMS Corner S, Univ. and Forest Phone 2-1005 I am delighted to learn that Play Production has decided to produce for the last offering of the year The Kingdom of God by Gregorio Marti- nez Sierra. This play by the author of The Cradle Song, which was one of the outstanding cinema produc- tions of 1934, is an excellent example of his treatment of themes of every day life in an optimistic spirit. Mar- tinez Sierra is an idealist who exalts humble virtues without becoming ro- mantically sentimental. The Kingdom of God is not so much a play in the general acceptance of the term as it is a series of charac- terizations grouped about the life of Sister Gracia who devotes her life to the relief of the suffering world. In the first act as a young nun, she ministers to the unfortunate old peo- ples' home. In the second, some years later, she understandingly directs a ma- ternity hospital, while in the third as an older mature woman she watch- es over the development of a group of orphans with a firm gentleness which develops the final theme that her charges must grow into men who will correct the abuses of society so that there will be no need of asylums for the poor in days to come. Throughout the three acts several types of social outcasts are shown in sharp contrast to the character of Sister Gracia. The result is a picture built up from numerous small parts which offer real opportunity for ex- cellent acting. This use of a woman as the chief character is typical of Martinez Sier- ra, and typical also is the emphasis on the fact that the maternal instinct is present in all women, awaiting only an opportunity to express itself. His women are fond of life and happiness, but are also sympathetic women to whom one can go for consolation. His women in his comedies of man- ners and in his plays of characteriza- tion, such as The Kingdom of God, are modern women who select their own life work, breaking loose from the traditions of the older Spain. They exemplify the rights of women in modern Spanish society and their duties to it. I am sure that the production of a drama by one of the foremost liv- ing dramatists of Spain will be a very pleasing finale to the interesting se- ries of presentations by Play Pro- duction during the current year. nolds. By PROF. KENNETH T. ROWE (Of The English Department) With The Bronies last year Mr. Henderson brought to Ann Arbor theater-lovers what is even more ex- citing than a Broadway success, a premiere presentation. The premiere performance of The Ugly Runts by Robert Raynolds scheduled for this season promises to be an event of even greater distinction and more in- tense interest. The play reflects an event the news of which last October stirred and shocked the world, the hunger strike of 1,200 coal miners in Pecs, Hungary; it is a part of what Brooks Atkinson recently designated in the drama columns of the New York Times as the most visible trend in today's =theater, "the vigorous ad- vancement of the drama of the Left"; and it is also a part of that other most striking manifestation of the current theaterthe return to poetry. While allied to the revolutionary and radical drama in the bitterness of the presentation of the sufferings of workers, The Ugly Runt contains none of the standardized element of propaganda or allegiance to a par- ticular economic and political theory that characterizes in greater or less degree the drama of the Left. Mr. Raynolds displays rather the detach- ment and breadth of view of Gals- worthy in Strife, although with a more heart-wrung penetration into the misery of those whose misery is most profound, the workers. Instead of the conventional villain- ies of the bosses, Mr. Raynolds flays the abject bowing of society before that mystic concept, economic law, in this implying a criticism of Marx- ism equally with established capi- talism. Matthew Bronson, the mine president, as well as the workers, is presented as bewildered, caught in the toils of the blind allegiance which society has granted to an inhuman monster. Mr. Raynolds' conception of the motivation of a mass movement so almost beyond understanding as the determination upon deliberate death by huiger in the depths of the mine is one of imaginative grandeur. Dom- minating the action is Kamas, leader of the miners, a Messianic figure. But the Messianic concept is project- ed and expanded into the mass, four hundred miners whom Kamas has welded with the fire of his love into a unit of sacrifice; if they die, it is to arouse the world. Notwithstanding some rather em- barrassing technical difficulties, the dance recital given yesterday after- noon and evening at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theater was a distinct suc- cess. Comparatively speaking, this program was not as interesting as the previous offerings by this group. There was a lack of enthusiasm and spontaneity in the work that was so unmistakably present in the original efforts of the Dance Club. However, this program did demonstrate that the individual choreographers of the group have greatly improved in de-, veloping a superior sense of design. The opening number was an unfor- tunate choice. It was often blurred and on the whole uninteresting. How- ever, the "Studies" were especially gratifying, the men's numbers be- ing very well done. Of the two spir- itual numbers, evidently inspired by Ted Shawn and his dancers, the sec- ond one was the most impressive. The "Go Down Moses" spiritual left us unmoved. It did not build to suf- ficient dramatic heights. The "Campus Bits" was the high point of the first half of the program. Humorously conceived, excellently executed, this number does by the in- jection of a little artistry what all the dull and unimportant Junior Girls Plays and Union Operas strive for and never reach. Julia Wilson and Truman Smith do excellent work in their direction and execution. Every student taking part in this number contributed to the whole ef- fect. The second part of the program was superior to the first half. The open- ing number, "Religious Cycle" was well thought out and expertly done. The modern movement was the most interesting. "Le Chat qui s'amuse" again' presented a dramatic theme in dance form. It was conceived with originality and cleverness. Oren Parker makes his first solo appear- ance in this number.. . The "Pavanne" and the "Clair de Lune" were also well received. "The Way of the Cross" composed by Col- lin Wilsey was enthusiastically re- ceived and "Satie" repeated from for- mer performances was adequate, but clearly needed the presence of a solo- ist, present in the former presenta- tion. Those students whose work was especially outstanding were Orin Parker, Julia Wilson, Collin Wilsey, and Truman Smith. With careful study and diligent work this group could become a focal point for a re- newed interest in this form of artis- tic expression. -CHARLES HARRELL Frederick S. Randall Travel Service 12 Nickels Arcade Ph. 6040 F Let us help you plan your trip to Europe. We are agents for all lines. Lowest prices and best service. Special U. of M. Sailing to El 1 t1o 'E I 'Ir .. i with the University of Michigan Union Dance Orchestra on the HAMBURG-AMERICAN Flagship "NEW YORK" June 20, 1935, from New York -DAY ALL-EXPENSE *p232 ,5OSTUDENT TOUR. . .a... for Students over 19 years - $281.00 A Few Choice Accommodations Still Available. For Information- JULES HALTENBERGER, '36E, Union Travel Desk 10-11 a.m. or KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU, 601 East Huron St., Ph. 6412 r I MOTHER'S DAY MAY FESTIVAL Cards for Mother's Day 5e to 50c r r/ BOOKS --For Mother's Day I * A striking display of handsome, new de- signs to choose from. + Select your card now NEXT SUNDAY, May 12th, will be Mother's Day. Let's remember her on this lovely occasion with a Wholesome, Worthwhile Book 1. Wednesday, May 15, 8:15 P.M. Artist Concert. Festival debut of HELEN JEPSON, Metro- politan Opera Soprano. World premiere of "Drum Taps." Howard Hanson, composer, conducting. The Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra, The Choral Union, Frederick Stock, Con- ductor. 2. Thursday, May 16, 8:15 P.M. Artist-Choral Concert. Festival debut of MARY MOORE, coloratura soprano of the Metropolitan. "Fing David" by Honegger. Ethyl Hayden, soprano; Myrtle Leonard, con*- tralto; Paul Althouse, tenor; Paul Leyssac, narrator. Choral Union, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Earl V. Moore and Frederick Stock, Conductors. 3. Friday, May 17,2:30 P.M. Young People's Concert. RUTH POSSELT, violinist. Or- chestra accompaniment. Young People's Festival Chorus. World premiere of "Jumblies" by Dorothy James. Eric DeLamarter and Juva Higbee, Conductors. 4. Friday, May 17, 8:15 P.M. Artist concert., GIOVANNI MARTINELLI of the Metropoli- tan Opera, tenor. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Fred- erick Stock, Conductor. 5. Saturday, May 18, 2:30 P.M. Symphony concert. JOSEF LHEVINNE, pianist. Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Frederick Stock, Conductor. 6. Saturday, May 18, 8:15 P.M. for Mother s' Day, May 12. She would thoroughly enjoy one of these: Lloyd Douglas - GREEN LIGHT Rachel Field - TIME OUT OF MIND Mary Chase - MARY PETERS James Hilton - GOOD-BYE MR. CHIPS Louis Adamic - GRANDSONS I 11 ,1 II