THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1936 Mm Puli'tzer DAVIS' Fiction Winner Is Mere Apprentice Work Of Novelist Awards Stir Dissension Among Critics Russian Noblewoman Or Cosmopolitan Adventuress? Competent But U I Wins $I,oo F HONEY IN THE HORN by H. L. Da- vis. Harper & Brothers. 1935. By MORRIS GREENHUT "I had originally hoped to'include in the book a representative of every calling that existed in the State of Oregon during the homesteading pe- riod - 1906-190*8. I had to give up that idea, owing to lack of space, and consideration for readers. Within the limits set me, I have done my best.' These words, with which Mr. Davis prefaces his Harper Prize and now Pulitzer Prize novel, indicate, it seemns to me, the chief defect of the book. Mr. Davis has attempted to write an epic of the hard, adventurous life of Ore- gon settlers in the early nineteen hundreds, and has attempted to do so by cramming into 380 over-crowded pages various aspects of Oregon life culled from personal experience, leg- end, history. The result is that the novel is unsuccessful in more ways than one. It tries to cover too much ground and lacks direction. Mr. Da- vis does not do justice to his theme or his material; the book he intended to write still remains to be written. He has as yet to learn - Whitman's failure might have provided him with an object lesson-that a mere cat- alog of particulars hardly consti- tutes an epic, or even a novel less pre- tentious in scope.eAs it stands Honey in the Horn is a heterogeneous mass of interesting but unsifted matter; it can hardly be said to rise above the novel of local color, which a few years ago was held in such high esteem. Mr. Davis, to be sure, does attempt to give design to his work. The ac- tion centers around the fortunes of the youthful Clay Calvert and his equally youthful girl, Luce, which carry them from the Oregon hopfields and mountain-grazing lands, through the Indian fishing villages on the coast, to the homestead farmlands in the eastern part of the state. But the plot is weak, and almost col- lapses under the burden of extraneous matter it is forced to carry. Only occasionally does the author manage to'weld the broad and variegated pat- tern of Oregon life into the main nar- rative pattern of the novel. Honey in the Horn, far from being the outstanding novel of 1935, is merely the apprentice work of a prom- ising writer. Mr. Davis writes with a sure and steady hand. Some of his descriptive passages are about as good as any I have read in recent years, and his salty humor and healthy outlook provide an exhilarating antidote to the Faulkner school. But if he is to transcend the category of the pic- turesque and the local, if he is to rise above being merely "folksy," he must probe more deeply into the lives of the Oregon people he knows so well, he must show greater insight and comprehension than is revealed in Honey in the Horn. I f z r ti }1 t } C r k I r. 1 The above scene occurs near the end of Robert Sherwood's Pulitzer Prize-winning play "Idiot's Delight." Lynn Fontanne is seated at the left. Alfred Lunt is fartIr-st upstage and first to the observer's right of Miss Fontanne. t STRANGE HOLINESS, by Robert P. Tristram Coffin. Macmillan. $1.75. 1 By DR. ARNO L. BADERE (Of the English Dept.)i With the award of one thousandt dollars to Robert P. Tristram Coffin for his Strange Holiness, the Pulitzer1 Committee continues its practice oft recognizing what one critic has called "competent but unexciting poetry."c There was a time when the awardst went to poets such as Robinson Frost,( Amy Lwell, and Conrad Aiken, butE the recent awards, except for the recognition of MacLeish in 1932, havei gone to distinctly minor talents. TheE Committee's phrase, "For the best book of verse by an American author,"t would seem to be in need of furtheri definition when books by Georgei Dillon, Robert Hillyer, Audrey Wurde-< meyer, and R. P. T. Coffin receive theE coveted distinction. Coffin's volume is composed of1 about sixty lyrics on the theme of1 ;ountry life and nature. The poems1 BOOK-ENDS Alice Liddell Hargreaves, inspira- .ion for Lewis Carroll's immortal Alice In Wonderland, is the subject of a new book, Carroll's Alice. Part of it is an address delivered by Harry Morgan Ayres for the Carroll Cen- tenary Celebration in 1932 at Co- lumbia University. Mrs.. Hargreaves, a little old lady of 77, crossed the ocean to be present at the function. * * * Van Wyck Brooks, famous critic Who served as a judge in the essay division of the Hopwood Contest last year, launches on the major work of his career in The Flowering of New England, a literary history of the United States. The book will appear June 22. Apparently this is merely the first volume of a longer work, for the years it covers are from 1815 to 1865, and deals with Boston, Cam- bridge and Concord for the most part. The contribution which the New Eng- land writers made to a new and changing America receives particular stress in Mr. Brooks' conclusion. Such critics ,in the opinion of this reviewer, are hopelessly near-sighted By all odds the largest and most im- minent peril confronting the United States today is the peril of European war. When he comments on this peril, when he ridicules the idiocy which makes it possible, Mr. Sher- wood, in the highest sense of the phrase, is dealing with the American scene. For America happens to be part of the world, although William, Ran- dolph Hearst denies it, and the soon- er the Pulitzer committee, and all committees, and everyone, realize this, and what it means, the health- ier will America be. American scene, indeed! rnexcitingPoetry or Robert Coffin are short, they exhibit a genuine familiarity with and feeling for the simple, homely aspects of farm life in American as well as an occasional touch of mysticism, and they are written in simple, restrained style. If there is any unifying theme in the volume it is that of man's kin- ship with the ancient earth, the per- ception of beauty and mystery in tree and field beast. This per- ception the author has significantly entitled Strange Holiness. The poems are product of sure, finished crafts- manship, and reveal occasional flash- es of marked poetic beauty. But with so much said, it remains to note the author's limitations. His range of subject and form is nar- row; the music of his verse repeats, and though he has at times a pretty enough fancy, the intellectual range is slight. The only attempt at a long poem is a distinct failure. If, as has been said there are dashes of poetic beauty, they are weli sca teree, ano there is much dull or merely pleasant verse. In some ways Coffin shows affinities with Frost, but he has little of Frost's homely incisiveness or wit. He is at his best in simple descrip- tions of a barn in winter, of potato diggers, of the death of a pheasant - legitimate enough subjects for poetry but indicative of the minor poet. The Pulitzer award should be given for work of greater significance. R[S[RAIIONS Any Seo. er ised TRIP-TO.C R+ ISU COMPLETED FREE" HRE* -= EUROPE BERMUDA, CALFORNIA, CHINA, ETC. BOOK NOW E pLER Advis. LivensUd Sine 1917. Reence-Any Lnrsi Rank KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU ANN woa' 1 FORTHCOMING BOOKS I WILL LIFT UP MINE EYES by Hubert Skidmore. Double- day, Doran. $2.00, DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK by Walter D. Edmonds. Little, Brown & Co. SAINT JOAN OF ARC by V. Sack- ville-West. Doubleday Doran. $3.00. BEST SHORT STORIES by Ed- ward J. O'Brien. Houghton Mif- flin. $2.50. WHO OWNS AMERICA by Her- bert Agar. Houghton Mifflin. $3.00. LOUISA MAY ALCOTT by Kath- erine Anthony. Knopf. SENIOR CAPS and GOWNS Place Your Orders Without De- lay. No Deposit Is Required When Orders Are Given. We furnish all new outfits of the better quality and made ac- cording to the Intercollegiate Standards. Phone Orders - 6915-7296 GEO. J. MOE Sports Shops Unle s you want snow, the best time in the whole year to take a fine picture of your resi- dc ace is the coming week. G. R. SWAIN PHOTOGRAPHER 713 East University Phone 2-1924 Drama Prize T Melodramatic By C. HART SCHAAF When the Pulitzey commiatee an- nounced, several months ago, that the drama prize was no longer to go more than once to one author, the critics, professional and amateur, be- gan to wonder whether Robert Sher- wood might not win the 1936 award with his forthcoming play. Dead End and Winterset, both out- standing plays and both likely choices for the prize, were dropped from the running because their authors, Sidney Kingsley and Maxwell Anderson, had each already received it. Mr. Sher- wood was one of two major con- temporary American playwrights who had not yet been crowned. The oth- er was Clifford Odets, and, as it be- came apparent that his 1935-36 ef- fort, Paradise Lost, wasn't quite up to expectations, interest in the script on which Mr. Sherwood was working was understandably heightened. The Sherwood play was named Idiot's Delight. It opened in the mid- dle of the spring, and the Theatre Guild, true to its best form, gave it a flawless production with a cast headed by Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne and also including, inci- dentally, Frances Compton, whom their arms again are around one an- o Sherw ood s other - and then the tinkle of break- ing window-glass ,sounding above Mr. W a I Lunt's reckless jazz version of "On C var -riiC1sr ward Christian Soldiers," and a sud- denly darkened stage, indicate that Mr. Henderson has made well known one more Sherwood romance is about to be nipped in the bud-this time by to Ann Arbor audiences. I the bombs of war birds. From the very beginning it was a No one who has seen it will deny smash hit, and the critics were soon that the play chosen for the 1936 agreeing that their earlier hunch Pulitzer prize is first-rate theatre. Of had in all probability been sound all shows produced this year in New York, Idiot's Delight almost certainly in other words, that the Sherwood has for most people the highest play would get the prize. amount of agreability, measured in Thus it was that, when the Pulizer terms of amusement content per min- announcements were made last week, ute. And its denunciation of war, the drama award failed to surprise taken out of the role of wearisome, anyone. More significantly, for the platform morality, and sugar-coated first time in years the critics and the with a highly melodramatic plot, is drama committee were on the same apt and effective. side of the fence and the atmopshere The Lunt-Fontanne team is remained free of the loud and caustic superb. Mr. Sherwood, in fact, will jeers with which the critics, nearly do well to cut his award in thirds and every spring, have been wont to fill divvy up, as a matter of principle, it. with these two stars for their in- Idiot's Delight is through and valuable contribuion to the success of through a typical Sherwood play. In his play. the first place its background is a There is a clause in the Pulitzer Large Issue-War. Nearly all Sher- drama rules which states that a play wood plays are similarly set against should preferably be chosen which a Large Issue. In last year's Petri- deals with the American scene, and ficd Forest, for instance it was Psy- some persons - ardent sympathizers, chological Decadence in 1935 Ameri- no doubt, with Mr. Hearst's "Buy ca. American" program - are complain- The second bit of typical Sher- ing that Idiot's Delight, dealing as it wood technique is bang-up melo- does with European war clouds, fails dramaexcitingly conceived, expert- to fulfill this Americanism clause. ly tailored - and bearing no relation to the large background theme. In Idiot's Delight, Alfred Lunt is a twangy, hard-boiled, immensely real- istic hoofer from the American Mid- dle-West. Lynn Fontanne is intro- j duced as the exotic, White Russian mistress of a fabulously wealthy mu- nitions manufacturer. Earthy Mr. Lunt feels, inspite of her present sophisticated glory, that he has known her in other and much humb- ier circumstances. The audience is pretty sure Mr. Lunt is right, and the considerable suspense of the play arises from the question, will Miss Fontanne admit it? The third hall-mark of a Sherwood play is the cliactic situation in which hero and heroine break through the barriers to a short, ecstatic period of & love -- and are separated forever. In last year's Petrified Forest, it will be recalled, Mr. Sherwood utilized a bul-G let from Duke Mantee's gun to end the romance of Alan and Gabrielle. In Idiot's Delight, Miss Fontanne fi- nally confesses she is the girl Mr. fo Lunt knew briefly but unforgettably, back in Iowa; for a few moments ofM C am p ______________U_()f______________' -4 4.4 P ar' *y Picure! For Party Pictures, See "'Bob" Gach Phone 9028 I I I T'he Camera Shop in the Arcade INS~U I SURANCE\ FOR EACH DEPOS3TOI CAN I MAKE DEPOSITS IN YOUR BANK BY MAIL? i Yes, if you are a depositor of this bank you can send, at any time, checks or money orders for deposit in your account. Entries will be made in your account the same as if you brought them in person and we will mail a notice that your deposit has been received. Checks or money orders for deposits should be properly en- dorsed with your signature. Currency should be sent by registered mail. Banking by mail is a service developed for our depositors to be used when it is inconvenient for them to come to the bank in person. However, we like the personal contact with our customers and prefer to see them whenever possible, rather than transacting their business through the mails. We invite you to use this convenience of banking by mail. Ann Arbor Savings &Commariraercial Bank Main Office University Office: Southeast Cor. Main & Huron 707 North University Ave. Phone 2-2576 Phone 4281 Engraving Of Quality It is time to leave your order for COMMENCEMENT ENGRAVING We are offe ring: 100 CALLING CARDS with Plate ..... $2.50 to $4.50 100 CALLING CARDS without Plate (processed) .$2.00 100 CALLING CARDS from your Plate........$1.50 Special Attention given to WEDDING INVITATIONS and ANNOUNCEMENTS WAHR'S BOOKSTORES 1ii Engaved .65 100 Cards & Plates16 THE ATHENS PRESS 'Printers City's Lowest Prices on Printing. 308 North Main Street - Dial 2-1013 for Boys May 15 and 16 316 South State Street Main Street Opposite Court House L i I I a n ... " 1 to '00, AV, / N. I/ Have you tried our famous fresh strawberry short. F07 - AMIMP- -AW - - - - - I II SII iI. I I