THE MiICIAN D AILY PAGE SEVEN IN THE WORLD O'F BOOKS i -_ - Artist Writes Of His Self-Exile In Greenland's Icy Mountains SALAMINA; illustrated by the au- thor, Rockwell Kent. Harcourt Brace, $3.75. By FOSTER MOHRHARDT (Of the Library Staff) Evidently Kent is not at all timor- ous about what his readers may think when they read this rather frank ac- count of his life in Greenland. It is as he says, "A record - of life with- out the luxuries that we enjoy in America, without most of the gadgets that we have come to call necessities of life in a barren country where even bare existence is precarious and the means of getting it a hazard ... that's what the story is about - that and much more: Adventure, Ro- mance, brave men and beautiful un- moral women." The barrenness and cold are a thin background much overshadowed by adventure and ro- mance: Kent went to Greenland as he had gone to Alaska some years before, as an artist who finds an intense beauty to be painted in a landscape of ice and snow. It is only in his paintings and in this book that he has caught the intenseness of this northern life. The full-page illus- trations accompanying the text serve as dramatis personae, but they are not at all suggestive of the actual characters. The blending of typog- raphy and the woodcuts used as chap- ter headings is however unusually pleasing. In going to Greenland, he also de- sired that escape from civilized life to liberty which led Gaugin from the Paris Bourse to Tahiti in the South Seas. As did Gaugin in Noa-Noa, Kent relates his attempt to live as a native. Kent, however, admits he did not find an escape. Speaking of the Greenlanders he says, "The primitive that still endures n us may envy them. Theirs is a life that we at times in thought revert to. They fit that life; we don't. I envy them." From his attempt to live as a na- tive Greenlander, Kent began to know the people in the village, and as they became a part of his life, the book was inevitable. Presented with such characters as Trolleman, the villian- ous trading-post manager, David the hunter, and Anna and Salamina the housekeepers, presented with these and many more people, Kent had but to watch them and the book wrote itself. The first opportunity for observa- - tion occurred when Kent began build- ing his house. Most of the village crowded about him, all trying to help. "Every day was a prolonged social event that brought me the acquaint- ance of many charming people, and, incidentally, somewhat advanced the' work at hand. Reach one hand for a board; have ten more seize it simul- staneously . .. Shall I ever forget the hanging of my inner door! The people mounted boxes to see in. With- out a word, just looking, watching every little move I made, they stayed and stared." When the house was at last fin- ished, it was necessary to find a housekeeper. Salamina, a widow with two children, was found. She was recommended to Kent as "the most 1faithful, noble, and most beautiful. of all the women of North Green- land." It is for her that the book is named, for her nobility of character and her expertness at housekeeping. There is in this northern life much more gayness and dancing than we are accustomed to believe. The true social life is found at a "kaffe- mik," a coffee-drinking. Your invita- tion may come at any time during the day, and when it comes you must go at once to the home where the party is being given. "Seated, you toss a lump of sugar into your mouth, pour the saucer full of coffee, and from the saucer drink it. When finished, you put your cup and saucer back on the table, sit down again, and become as the rest - silent. Meanwhile, a number of the guests who, having had their coffee, have sat their time out, have gotten up and left. You bide your time, and follow. The party lasts like this most of the day. And then, that night the dance. Down near the shore stands a dilapi- dated turf hut. Six feet by ten of wet and filthy floor space in a drafty hole: Welcome, you hundred people, dance, enjoy yourselves! The pity of it is they do." Kent was no longer the painter when he wrote this book, for he does not select his material, accentuating some parts and sublimating others. He has, instead, included all the pan- orama of village life. Nothing is out of focus. Whether he is describing squalor and dirt or heroic adventure, he is always sincere and often pic- turesque. We accept Kent's picture of Igdlorssuit, Greenland, as authen- tic, amusing and sometimes exciting. C 1- SILAS CROCKETT by Mary Ellen Chase. MacMillan. $2.50. n By DOROTHY GIES "As for man, his days are as grass; as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone, and the place thereof shall know it no more.' f With these words of the Psalmist as salt in her mouth, Mary Ellen Chase sets down her quiet saga of the clip- per-ship era in Maine, from its glor- ious zenith through its shadowy de- cline and eclipse. It 'is the story of r Silas Crockett, the dynamic young captain of "Southern Seas," who . grows rich on the opulent Indies trade _ of the '30's; of Nicholas, his son, in whose ears already throbs the dis- tant foreboding of a newer age; his grandson, Reuben, forced to serve china humbly the new taskmaster, steam; of ro and finally, the great grandson, Silas, flecke whom the depression sets at work in of leE a herring-factory on the coast. fle With the inherent dignity, of the flake Puritan spirit all four generations plate accept their respective fates. The thel last of the line, the younger Silas, disappointed in his career, can still stare out at sea like a prophet and say stoically, "All the things we've learned can't take away what's root- ed in us through generations like these around us and through this coast and sea. Believing in a thing doesn't mean that you've got to un- derstand all about it. I think be- lieving in a thing means hanging on- to it because you know it's good and, even when you lose faith in it for a time, still hanging on to what it did for you when you had it." It is an epic of material rather than spiritual decay, and it is here that Miss Chase disagrees with Robert Tristram Cof- fin, whose recent Red Sky in the Morning was woven on the same theme. For her the blood of the old sea-going aristocracy has not thin- ned; only their prosperity and cul- ture have ebbed with the time. Undoubtediy the first portion of the book devoted to the golden days of the early Crocketts is the finest and most memorable. Here the glamour of the old shipping days is recreated with a rare beauty and sympathy, and here one feels that nostalgia of the land-bound for the sea, so marked in her earlier Mary Peters. The appeal of such descrip- tions as Solace Winship's wedding, lies in her judicious selection and at- tention to detail, a wholly feminine quality of writing. Of the wedding Recreates The Gallant Of Clipper Ships ... Era " ' k so that they made shining globes within the polished table The Puritan spirit is the essence . of Miss Chase's style, the clarity and homespun simplicity of New England. There is a certain charm in her chary economy of phrasing, but the tight re- 'serve that precludes emotionalism makes one wish that she possessed a ..~... better grasp of the dramatic. As in most semi-historical novels covering a long span of time, the rich roman- ticism of the past sustains the earlier portions, while the later are bycon- trast colorless and tepid. The slow montonous tenor is little relieved by reiterated memories. The book, quartered as it is into four distinct generations, lacks the MARY ELLEN CHASE fiber to mold these divisions into a compact whole. There is a sameness, she says : " ... cups and saucers not onlyof detail but of narrative, se and green and gold, flowers in the last three sections. Each mar- ed with sun amid a wilderness riage is contracted in similar man- , ner; each union produces one son; aves, butterflies of raised gold that son grows up in the old house in poised above them, fragile so much the same way that all three s that became transparent in boyhoods blend into a single pattern.' ight from the western windows Outside of the first Silas and his the characters on the whole are two- dimensional, quite lacking in any real depth and individuality. Doubtless Silas Crockett, with its facile charm and easy rhythm, will find a great body of readers. But, with neither the vivid brightness of Willa Cather nor the power and pro-. found feeling of Ellen Glasgow, one, doubts its permanence in the world j of literature. SOVIET WOMEN An interesting view of the New Russia will be presented in We Soviet Women by Tatiana Tehernavin. In this books she writes of people she met and knew in the Soviet Union. BOOK FORECAST FOR NOVEMBER THE BATTLEGROUND. By Hilaire Belloc. Lippincott. $4.00. DANIEL FROHMAN PRESEITS. By Daniel Frohman Kendall. $3.50. I WRITE AS I PLEASE. By Walter Duranty. Simon and Schuster. $3.50. TWENTY YEARS UNDER THE SEA. By J. E. Williamson Hale. $3.75. BEFORE I FORGET. By Burton Rascoe. Doubleday, Doran. $3.00. mother Abigail, both finely limned, t . . If Your Marks are In The Red . If Exams and Studies Make You Blue . . If the Future Looks Black Then hurry to State and North U and buy COLLEGE OUTLINES at The College Bookshop STATE STREET AT NORTH UNIVERSITY U This is National Children's Book Week Never before were we so well prepared to make the Children Happy - Our two large stocks embrace all that is wholesome and lovely of CHILDREN'S CLASS- ICS - also the Current Publications including: New picture books by Marjory Flack, Lois Lenski, Dorothy Lathrop and many others. Exciting stories, well illustrated, for older children by Eliza Orne White, Elizabeth Coatsworth, Caroline Dale Snedeker, Arthur Ransome, Maxwell Reed and Wilfred S. Bronson. The Milne Classics - When We Were Very Young, Now We Are Six, Winnie-the-Pooh, and The House at Pooh Corners, with original illustrations now at a new low price of $1.00 each. Many old and familiar titles that should be in every child's library, now available at 50c, 75c and $1.00. TWO LARGE STOCKS TO SELECT FROM - A Book For Every Child, at nI in Evening of Un- fathomable Pleas- urability, with the Master of the fAir Waves, EMERSON GILL, and his Inim- itable Orchestra at the PAN ELLE NIC The Michigan League November 29th $3.50 Nine till One is I