SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN MT . . . . . . . . .......... ... . ........ . Startling Realism Marks Hanley 's Latest Novel OfLiverpool Docks STOKER BUSH. By James Hanley, New York: Macmillan. 1936. By ALFRED H. LOVELL, JR. This, like The Furys, is a story of the Liverpool docks. Mr. Hanley's characters are fully realized, never exaggerated, and they move through scenes portrayed with a startling real- ism that can leave no indifference in the reader; he is incorporated in the action. The men are dock hands, stokers, sailors, all men of the sea. Their passions are strong and ele- mental; women and liquor are major interests in their shore life. Chris Bush is a stoker, tall, broad- shouldered, and simple. Yet his hon- esty and trustworthiness, the sincer- ity of his love for his young wife, Anne, are indubitable. Anne has a pretty face, a seductive body, and a complete knowledge of Chris. With KIRSTEIN His Book Will Charm' Layman As Well As Dance Expert DANCE: A SHORT HISTORY OF' THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE DANCE, by Lincoln Kirstein; (Put- nam). Lincoln Kirstein is a tall gentle- man with very short hair, a rather reserved air, and an encyclopedic knowledge of dancing and the stage. This knowledge has been very use- ful to the American Ballet which George Balanchine is whipping into shape for the Metropolitan Opera and other engagements this winter. It was also useful while, for seven years, he was editing "Hound and Horn," one of the best of the "little" magazines. Now it should be a help to the country at large, for Mr. Kir- stein has written Dance: A Short History of the Development of the Dance. The book is not so very short, run- ning to 350 large and rather closely printed pages. But it is a first rate example of what a trained mind can compress into one volume, a highly useful book for all students of the dance, a good background text for the rapidly increasing audiences which greet ballet performances in this country, and often good fun as well. Such as the remarks on Mary Wigman, who Mr. Kirstein believes does not mean a great deal in the long run. The book begins back in the foggy days before recorded history. It reaches Greece and Rome by way of Egypt and the ritualistic dances of the Nile-land. There was a period when dancing and religion went hand in hand. They still do in some places. But the ballet as we know it was born out of the Renaissance, al- though not instantly or immaculate- ly. Individual dances only began to emerge about two centuries ago, how- ever, and the nineteenth century is perhaps the century of greatest de- velopment-comprising as it does the movement from France to Russia, and back again. So to the great ro- mantics, the Duncans, Fokines and Fullers, and so to the present increas- ing world interest in the dance on the part of the public. Mr. Kirstein's critical opinions are not all orthodox, the heterodoxy be- ing usually the result of knowing more about the subject than the next man. The book concludes with a val- uable chapter on the dance today, some equally valuable pictures, and a compendium of useful information for the student. Forthcoming Books FICTION Dust Over the Ruins by Helan Ash- ion, Macmillan. The Rolling Years by Alice Sligh Turnbull. Macmillan. The Last Puritan by George San- tayana, Scribner's. Faster, Faster by E. M. Delafield, Harper's. NON-FICTION The Way Of A Transgressor by Negley Farson. Harcourt and Brace. The Exile by Pearl Buck. Reynal & Hitchcock. Alma Mater by Henry Seidel Can- by Farrar & Rinehart. these two and Rooney, a smart bo- sun's mate, Hanley establishes as a plot the eternal triangle: the orig- inality of the plot consists in its application to slum characters. Chris and Anne have none of the graces of culture, society, or birth; they are fundamental, Chris knowing only that Anne is his happiness and joy in life, Anne knowing what her deser- tion will mean to Chris yet lacking the courage to tell him that she no longer loves him. When the story begins, Anne has been in love with Rooney for two years. Chris, home between voyages, hears gossip for the first time. He speaks to Anne, but she cleverly avoids a direct answer and allays his doubts. Gossip is soon accepted as truth, however, and Chris listens to advice from Anne's father, 'Arry. All con- cerned have one sovereign remedy; Chris should give his faithless wife a good beating to turn her head in the right direction. He finally does :o, with the precision of an automaton and the strength of a stoker. He then heads for a "boozer." The struggle ,nds for Chris with Anne's oath on he Bible that she will be a good wife and mother. She has not the strength to refuse this vow, yet she has no .ntention of keeping it. Chris sails, and receives a letter from Anne in New York. The letter is a clean )reak on her part. Chris, deter- fined to kill Rooney, deserts his hip and stows away for a fast voy- age to Liverpool. While he is cross- ng. Anne and Rooney leave together ~or Cardiff. The action consumes a little over ,wo weeks, the scenes are smashing md vivid, there is no attempt to dis- uise the truth; Stoker Bush is a trong book, written for those who an sympathize and find beauty in the lower elements of humanity. ^hris, despite the power of his love and trust, never rises above the .imits of probability; he is a plain, ionest man and husband. Anne has ier weaknesses, yet her youth lends lepth and meaning to her conflicting lesires and to her realization of her >wn cowardliness. James Hanley, n short, has kept strictly within the imits of his characters. They are inexpressive, even when deeply moved md the author keeps them as they are - living, passionate, and simple people. The book is not pleasant diversion; it is primarily accurate portraiture. Mr. Hanley uses his own style, the subject is perhaps uncomfortably compressed. His story is of Chris, his wife, their parents and children - all common people. But the power and crude vigor of Mr. Hanley is un- common and undeniable. Stoker Bush, following The Furys, confirms his position as one of the most dy- namic and forceful writers of our time. Authors Prosper The year 1935 was a prosperous one for Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hail, the authors of Mutiny On The Bounty. The film version of this first volume of the "Bounty" trilogy so stimulated sales that a 21st printing was necessary, and the book, published in 1932, reappeared on national best-seller lists. Further- more, the new Nordhoff and Hall novel, The Hurricane, to be published as an Atlantic Monthly Press book on February 10, was sold serially to a current magazine. Here are at least two authors who will not be starving in a garret this winter. We Will Pay the HIGHEST PREMIUM CASH PRICES for the Books on This List %,,% 1GP Be Sure to Bring the Books on This List to Slater's BOTANY & ZOOLOGY HOLMAN & ROBBINS: Textbook of Botany. SHULL; Principles of Animal Biology. SHULL: Lab Manual for Animal Biology. CHEMISTRY & PHYSICS KENDALL: Smith's College Chemistry. CONANT: Chemistry of Organic Compounds. BODANSKY: Introduction to Physiological Chem. GETMAN & DANIELS: Outlines Theoretical Chem. LOWY & HARROW: Introduction to Organic Chem. RANDALL WILLIAMS & COLBY: General College Physics. RICH: Laboratory Man. Physics. PRESCOTT & JOHNSON: Qualitative Chemical Analysis, Ed. by McAlpine & Soule. WILLIARD & FURMAN: Elementary Quantitative Analysis. GEOGRAPHY, HISTORY, POLITICAL SCIENCE BOAK: History of Rome. BOLTON & MARSHAL: Colonization of N.A. CROSS: Shorter History of England & Great Britain. HACKER & KENDRICK: U.S. Since 1865. JACOBSON: Development of Amer. Pol. Thought. JAMES: Outline of Geography. LOWELL: Governments of England, 2 vol. Ed. MATHEWS: American State Government. MUNRO: Municipal Administration. OGG: European Government & Politics. PHILLIPS & FINCH: Appleton's Standard School Atlas. GOODE: School Atlas. SCHEVILLE: History of Europe. GLENDINNING & JAMES: Representative Regional Studies. PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIOLOGY BOSSARD: Social Changes & Social Problems. BERNARD: Fields and Methods of Sociology. COOLEY ANGELL & CARR: Introductory Sociology. FOLSOM: Social Psychology. GIST & HALBERT: Urban Society. EPSTEIN: Insecurity, A Challenge to America. MURDOCK: Our Primitive Contemporaries. NIMKOFF: The Family. PILLSBURY: Elementary Psychology of Abnormal. URBAN: Fundamentals of Ethics. WINSTONS: Cultural and Human Behavior. WOODWORTH: Psychology. LAWA ECONOMICS BYE: Principles of Economics. BYE & HEWETT: Applied Economics GEMMILL: Principles of Economics. BIGELOW & MADDEN: Cases on Rights in Land. WILLISTON & McCURDY: - Cases on Sales. ROTTSCHAEFER: Cases on Taxation. GODDARD: Cases on Bailments and Public Utilities. WELCH: Cases on Public Utility Regulations. MATHEMATICS EDUCATION CUBBERLY: Public Education in U.S. CURTIS: 2nd Digest to Investigate Teaching Science. DOUGLAS & BOARDMAN: Supervision of Secon. dary Schools. ENGLISH & SPEECH BRADLEY: Shakespearean Tragedy. BREDVOLD ROOT & S: English Prose of 18th Cent. BRIGANCE: The Spoken Word. BROWNING: Poems, Student Cambridge Edition. CAMPBELL & PYRE: Great English Poets. CAMPBELL PYRE & WEAVER: Poetry & Criticism of the Romantic Movement. CRANE: English Poetry 1660-1800. DREW: Discovering Poetry. Michigan Deskbook of English Composition, 1935. FOSTER: Argumentation & Debating (Paper Cov.) HOLLISTER: Literature for Oral Interpretation. SANDFORD & YEAGER: Principles of Effective Speaking. SHAKESPEARE: Student Cambridge Edition. VAN DOREN: Modern American Prose. WHITMAN: Seven Contemporary Plays. j WALTER: Essay Annual, 1935. COHEN: Differential Equations. DWIGHT: Table of Integrals. FREEMAN: Actuarial Mathematics. GLOVER: Compound Interest Tables. HALL & KNIGHT: Higher Algebra. MACMILLAN Log and Trig. Tables. LOVE: Analytical Geometry. LOVE: Calculus. MENGE & GLOVER: Introduction to Mathematics of Life Insurance. ROSENBACH & WHITMAN: College Algebra. SNYDER & SISAM: Analytical Geometry of Space. WHITWORTH: Choice and Chance. MILLER: Descriptive Geometry. ENGINEERING ALLEN & BURSLEY: Heat Engines. BADGER & BAKER: Inorganic Chemical Technology. EMSWILER: Thermodynamics. FRENCH: Engineering Drawing. GRAY & WALLACE: Principles and Practice of Electrical Engineering. 4-IOOL & JOHNSON: Handbook of Building Con- struction, Vol. 1. KEENAN: Steam Tables. KIMBALL & BARR: Elements of Machine Design. KING: Handbook of Hydraulics. POORMAN: Applied Mechanics. TIMOSHENKO & Mc: Strength of Materials. MILLS: Materials of Construction. BOSTON: Engineering Shop Practice, Vol. 1 & 1t. MOST COMPLETE LENDING LIBRARY IN ANN ARBOR Witham 's Drug Store 601 South Forest N 01'E: We are unable to list here all the books for which we are paying PREMIUM CASH PRICES. We buy all books whether they are used here now or not and pay liberal cash prices. ALL MEDICAL BOOKS, DICTIONARIES FRENCH, SPANISH, GERMAN, LATIN, ITALIAN High prices paid for readers and grammars to be used second semester. All language books must be clean and free from interlining. A Still More Liberal Trade Allowance--If You Prefer You'll find and "FRIENDLY SERVICE" "FAIR PRICES" VALENTINE'S DAY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14/ l Send a GREETING CARD Al 11 -4-{ at U - - - -t