THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 15,1936 ......... . .... OF- BOKS BUCK: 'THIE EXILE, by Pearl S. Buck. Reynal and Hitchcock, $2.50. By C. BRADFORD CARPENTER T HOSE who like a carefully, clearly written story, an inherently American story the most outstanding features of which are a rich under- standing of character and a wealth of fascinating incidents, will 'find Pearl Buck's latest publication a more than ordinarily enjoyable book. The Exile is a true story. It is the biography of Mrs. Buck's mother who was the wife of a missionary in China, and a missionary herself. Born of Dutch and French parents who had settled in West Virginia in the begin- ning of the nineteenth century, this remarkable girl grew to womanhood in an atmosphere of Presbyterian strictness mixed with American op- timism. Her father was predomi- nantly a gentleman, caring more about his daily fresh shirt than the family fortune, and most of the re- sponsibility fell on his little French wife and their eldest son. Carrie, the second child in the family, received from her mother exceptional practical abilities and an almost elfin sense of humor and from her father a sensitive feeling for beauty. Early in her life she felt a struggle within her- self between a deep religious duty and a strong sensuousness. She was attracted to asdebonair fellow-towns- man who "came to church for the singing, and, I am fain to believe, for Carrie's sake." But she met and married a young preacher after she had been away at school and had found that she wanted more than 'The Exile' Is A Carefully And Clarlv WrittSttn nrv l.L \--,' %.AJL 1 1r r x y i L L.\,..~ L L du un th slo ba to all sh on me an An Si PEARL BUCK ties to the church, which she had .dertaken with amazing vigor in e early years of her marriage, were owly replaced by those of her hus- nd and children and she lived her death a woman devoted to humanity and to the fate to which e had been subjected. Mrs. Buck's story :s a captivating. e, mingling an Oriental environ- ent full of danger and tragedy with idealistic and more important merican philosophy from which her other never wavered at any time. nce the story begins in Holland in r great grandparent's house, not a tle of the detail is the product of e author's imagination. It is none e less real, however, and serves sub- antially to increase the logic and e fullness of the truth in the biog- phy. Mrs. Buck knew her mother intimately and as sympathetically she in turn knew thousands of ffering Chinese women and chil- en. The Exile is never a dull book as any sucn thorough books are likely be. The steady, unfaltering style which it is written and the rather eidoscopic manner in which the - - -1 scene changes from the Orient to America and back again both in Car- rie's mind and in her travels make the story ever fresh and interesting. The descriptions of the numerous dangers and tragedies that Carrie confronts, only occasionally achieving great emotional heights, stabilize the thread of narrative and lead it on to a grat- ifyingly mature ending. There is no trick psychology, no af- fedtedness of style, no false artistry, and no obvious artificiality within the pages of The Exile. It is written with a soundness and a sincere purpose. It is a tribute to an extiraordinary woman who led a full Christian life. BOOK-ENDS~ The manuscript of the sixth Jalna novel which covers the period 1934- 35 will be published sometime next fall. This story is entitled "White- oaks Harvest." A British visitor in foreign parts who hastened to London on hearing of King George's illness was David Lloyd George, who has been in Mo- rocco working on the fifth volume of his war memoirs. In the six weeks before his return to England Lloyd George had written 160,000 words with his own hand. He does not type, and dictating cramps his style. The book will be ready for publication sometime next fall. * * *, It is a far cry from that first per- formance to the dignity of a Broad- way theatre where the Yale Puppe- teiers, as they are now called, enter- tained large crowds last Christmas, and to the New York studios where puppet shows are presented several evenings a week. And between these extremes lie years of trouping. In Punch's Progress Mr. Brown tells of his adventures with puppets, of shows before lumbermen in Michigan, Holly- wood celebrities, and school children in the south. While the book con- tains nothing of the mechanics of puppetry it is filled with anecdotes of famous people and amusing adven- Itures. f1[ GIANT BOOK Bargains BIRDS OF AMERICA, former- ly $17.50 .............. $3.95 THE BOOK OF OLD SHIPS by Henry B. Culver and Gordon Grant, formerly $20.00 $1.98 CANTERBURY TALES by Ge- offrey Chaucer, formerly $3.75 ... . .......... $1.89 THE COMPLETE GARDEN by Albert S. Taylor, M.S.A. and Gordon A. 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Formerly $3.75. . . .$1.39 naivete because they were the char- anything else to find some signifi- he acteristics of a child-like poetry, but cance in God for herself. lit when the same type is produced years She left America immediately after thi later, the judgment of it is not colored her marriage and thereafter lived in thi by the same curious and sympathetic various places in China to which she sta interest. In three or four of her and her husband had been sent. She th creations, however, Nathalia Crane bore him seven children, only three ral has approached the simplicity and of whom outlived childhood, and most as delightful whimsy of Emily Dickin- of whom were born under the most as son. There is that same terseness of harrowing circumstances. She wit- su expression, as well as the vividness nessed cholera epidemics, revolution- dr of imagery that makes Nathalia ary uprisings, famines, and floods, ' Crane's poetry charming. acting as physician (with knowledge m It is the pieces that reflect observa- she picked up as best she could), I to tions on life and superfluous thought, chapel musician, confidante, and most in however, that one would like to take important of all, as mother. Her kal to task. The rhythm of these poemsr is ragged, and the ideas are over- - -- laden with rich word pictures that cause the reader to lose himself in j obscurities. These poems detract from her work as a whole, and fill one with an intense longing to get back to the poetry where Nathalia Crane has caught that momentary flash of in- sight into the fantasy and charm that, is the imagination of every child. United States Naval Academy andTHE MIME was defeated by red tape. Indeed. 1 simple a gven when he gave the ketch to some s a a Norwegian friends, the Ecuadorian' cuaeyr governor of Galapagos took it from accurately re them. drawn - in About all this there is a quality of ?urposefulness rarely found. There Mimeograph is also a quantity of accurate and understanding observation equally service. rare. Robinson sails because he hadI rather be afloat than anywhere else, but he has a variety of interests be- yond the sea - bird life, animal life n remote places, the life of the sea. ACCREDITED D ocean currents are a few of these. And finally he can combine modesty and drama. The story of his attack. of appendicitis, of the flight of two A. B . naval planes to his rescue and the _ubsequent events could scarcely be written otherwise than dramatically,I AND FOR UP-T "o be sure. But in addition, parts of this story come dangerously close to SUPPLIES, E( being literature. ow - I -OGRAPH THE NEW ILLUSTRATED NA- TURAL HISTORY OF THE WORLD by Ernest Protherol. 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