'E T HE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1936 IN THE WORLD OF .BOOKS ____ __ _ _ _ _ __" _- -_ W-Hollow, A Place Under 'The Sun, Fenced In By The Wind MURRY Departs From Orthodoxy du MAl HEAD O'W-HOLLOW by Jesse Stu art, E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., $2.50. By A. S. HENDRICK Jesse Stuart begins his book of Kentucky short stories: "W-Hollow is a place under the sun, fenced in by the wind. It know, more things than it can ever tell. Itt earth cannot speak, or its brush . . it's just a place with four seasons wind sun, rain, snow -with scrub oaks and old log houses and new plank shacks - a place that's some- where for some and nowhere for many." Jesse Stuart is a member of the third generation of a W-Hollow fam- ily. He has written twenty-one short stories, dealing with that locality, in pungent mountaineer dialect. In read- ing them, one feels sure that W-Hol- low is the only real place in the world. Isolated from the outside, as the W-Hollowans are, the reader lives the self-sufficient life of Kentucky mountain people. They have double-barrel shotguns in W-Hollow, and they carrry them along when they "bell the bride." In W-Hollow there are a powerful lot of Democrats - and TWO Republi- cans; there are "knockin' sperits" and jugs of Kentucky's Melancholy Dew. Men are loquor-drinkin patriarchs. Women wash the family clothes in great iron pdts over hickory fires and smoke pipes of "taste-bud 'backer." It is not for breath-taking plots that Jesse Stuart's short stories are written; life, as you and I and the hill people live it, is hardly a series of the momehts of suspense that make conventional short story plots. It is for a picture of the people in W-Hollow as they live from day to day that Jesse Stuart has written these stories, quite without embellish- ments, either of softened hue or lurid exaggeration. But it should, also be noted that the book is not for those with delicate stomachs or a distaste for the primitive. One story is hardly superior to another. Humor and human under- - standing, intense love for their Ken- tucky soil and the enjoyment of an unprogressive way of existence, al] f are there. Particularly good is the first, 300 Acres of Elbow-Room, in e which Big Eif Porter receives a s "summons" from the Lord to say fare- s well to this world at ten o'clock . tonight. He has Treecy, his wife, cook a great quantity of eatables and sends his son, Little Eif, to invite all the neighbors in the Hollow to a farewell banquet. They come one, r they come all, and after the feast Big Eif tells them solemnly of the token he received, apportions his three hundred acres among the five children, and at five minutes to ten steps into the bedroom to await the summons. Stretched out full length on the feather bed in his Sunday suit, his black derby hat, his clean blue shirt, he waits: S " . . .He looks at the ceiling. 'One minute.' "'I hear the death bells,' says Eif, 'I hear them singin'. I see Pap and Ma. They are atter me.' "'It's all over,' says Hull Hillman, 'I never seed anythin' like that in my life or heard tell of it ... Mr. Stuart's first book, a long vol- ume of sonnets titled Man With a Bull-Tongue Plow, brought him ade- quate fame. And now, with a poet's aptitude for description and a short- story teller's eye for a good tale, he has decidedly strengthened his posi- tion in the ranks of new American writers. a cold, analytical reviewer of the march of events, who sees what is behind the intrigues and jealousies of nations. He shows his reader why the League of Nations is successful at one dispute and a failure at the next; why the disarmament conferences could not succeed; why the United States faces the possibility of a war with Japan when the vast majority in both lands want peace. These are only a few inconceivably important matters in the complex panorama of world affairs taken up by the author. The picture he paints is none too bright, nor are the fig- ures, though they are distinct and clear cut. Hitler is no bright figure; we see him as the mouthpiece of German resentment at the Treaty of Versailles; the "epitome of German mystification at the defeat of Ger- man arms; the figurehead of German hunger for another, newer, more pow- erful military machine." It is an ugly picture to see "Ger- man youth busy being trained to think and feel that the state is every- thing, the individual nothing; that you were born to die for Germany! Die, not live; die, not in the shop, but in the trenches." Mussolini does not make a very bright picture either. We see him as the "blatant, ruthless, powerful dreamer of empire, who insists that periodical war is the vital purge of a nation's motives and the indispensible stimulus of a nation's youthful viril- ity." Primarily a dictator, not as a leader of idealistic communism, we see Sta- lin, "a leader who can compromise every tenet of his party's convictions in order to maintain his dictatorship." Perhaps the author paints his pic- ture too dark, with his brush of bias and prejudice. Yet how drab the picture might have been without his vigorousness, his enthusiasm to tell all, his emotion - all resulting from his prejudices. His purpose is to stir his reader and he succeeds. By ALFRED LOVELL To Indulge Critical I JAMAICA INN. Daphne du Maurier. Vagaries Doubleday Doran; 1936. Jamaica Inn stood bleak and shut- SHAKESPEARE by John Middleton tered in the midst of lonely Cornish SHAryPARE baJohn MCddleton moors, no travelers stopped, and the By DR. PAUL MUESCHKE coachmen whipped their horses to a (By DR. PAL MDEmE gallop as they passed. Yet when the (Of the English Department) gales blew from the northwest at John Middleton Murry's Shake- night, every window was alight, men speare is above all a volume of im- roared and sang in the bar, wagon pression. In his 19 chapters he covers trains came stealthily in the dead the most important phases of Shake- of night and left, while Joss Merlyn, the most importantuphases ofvShake- JRIER Tells Dark Tale Of Cornish Moor ... her there: a promise to her dead du Maurier describes him as Mary mother, and an intense love and sym- saw him and was attracted to him: pathy for her aunt, whom she has "He wore a grimy shirt that had seen once some twelve years earlier. never seen a washtub, and a pair of Ash bar maid at the inn, Mary has dirty brown breeches, covered with the opportunity to meet Joss's com- horsehair and filth from an outhouse. panions in one of the Saturday night He had neither coat nor hat, and debauches that precedes mysterious there was a rough stubble of beard undertakings, and twice she watches on his jaw." the wagon trains come.and go in the The climax approaches as Mary' darkness. becomes Joss's confidante during a Two suitors and friends appear seven-day drunk. The real nature after some time: a sympathetic albino of his vile operations, as witnessed minister and Joss's brother, Jem, a by Mary herself is a stirring scene, horse-thief. Jem, who is the object but both the climax and the conclu- of Mary's affections, is a striking sion are rather laboriously achieved, character, a glorified and purified although they are satisfying and edition of his older brother. Miss, well-planned. 1 -1 On the whole, JAMAICA INN is blessed with a good plot and plenty of action. It is intended to be a ro- mance, but it lacks the power to ab- sorb the reader, the characters are at their best when abnormal, the at- mosphere is that of a nightmare, and it does not convince. Mary, the cen- tral character, lacks appeal because of her tremendous simplicity, almost stupidity, and even when victorious she remains, consistently enough, a country clod. N gigantic, dark and evil, gave fierce speare's art, stressing those plays and orders. Into this inn, avoided and especially such passages as in his feared by all the countryside, came judgment reveal the expanding pow- Mary Yellen, a country girl of ers of the poet. His work is a frag- twenty-three, to find behind the mentary and capricious account of desolate exterior a life of horror and Shakespeare's growth through the fear in harmony with the treacherous early poems and comedies, the com- marshes and moors all about. edies of the middle period, the chron- In this setting Miss du Maurier icle plays, the tragedies, and finally writes the tale of Mary; the failure the dramatic romances. of the book is no intrinsic fault of Murry is content to ignore the the plot, nor of the characters, but more exacting methods of the scholar lies rather in the inability to bring felt yet willing to appropriate the con- reality to any aspect of the work. At elusions reached by distinguished 1no point is the reader in sympathy critics of the past and present. with any character, whether it be s tMary, the malevolent landlord, Joss, Many of his chapters offer no more or his wife, Patience. In describing than a facile repetition of material the moors, the author gives no clear long known to competent students vision of the whole, no perspective. of Elizabethan drama. This is espe- The reader has only a feeling of con- cially true of his comments on the fusion and inaccuracy. The action, early comedies, the middle comedies, while violent, is no less vague; the problem plays, and the dramatic throughout the book Miss du Maurier romances. In the case of King Lear fails to shake off the feeling on the and Othello, his departures from part of the reader that what lies orthodoxy to indulge his own critical before him is mere fiction, a story of vagaries are unfortunate. Othello, as the imagination with no possibility he interprets it, is a play written to of reality. show that "we kill the thing we love," More detailed comment will serve and Lear is distinctly not so fine a to justify this condemnation. We play as Coriolanus. In it, he finds first meet Mary, fresh from the farm, "the imagination of the verse spas- in a coach on the way to join her modic." But curiously enough, there aunt Patience at Jamaica Inn. Mary is no treatment whatever of Cario- at this time is too childish for a lanes, though the reader's curiosity woman of her age, her reactions to the is avid to discover wherein lies its life about her are simple, but on the avowed superiority to Lear. whole she is pleasant and has possi- Murry is at his best in his treat- bilities as a character. ment of King John, Richard I, Ham- Upon reaching the inn after night- let, and Antony and Cleopatra. Espe- fall, she is horrified by the first en- cially illuminating is his analysis of counter with her uncle. In the fol- Faulconbridge, the cynical realist in lowing days she senses the evil and King John. Shakespeare's use and mystery that haunt the sinister hos- gradual mastery of the conceit in telry without being able to define Richard II has to my mind never been them. more deftly analyzed than by Murry. It is at this point, when Mary first Hamlet's attitude toward death and feels the impact of the atmosphere the hereafter and Cleopatra's love for of the inn, that the author fails to Antony are matters which he treats establish solid footing for later de- with enviable in sight. Here he enters velopment. For Mary is under no boldly into the imaginative world of compulsion to stay with her aunt. Shakespeare and reproduces the spirit Two motives are brought in to keep of Shakespeare's verse with a finesses,- e.arn.LZl to thC5t. of fRrn Brdl t hie( { e 0 f 0 s r P t t t a rl ,l Y F 7 f f r ";I MARTIN 1 i 1 1 1 J I A I I 11 F fr I His Propaganda Against Dictators Stirringly Rabid DICTATORS AND DEMOCRACIES TODAY by John Martin; Rollins Press. $2.50. By DONALD SMITH As one might assume from the title, this thorough book deals with the backgrounds and present status of the principal dictatorships and democ- racies existing today. It is a col- lection of the lectures of the author before audiences of students, profes- sors, college presidents and visitors! at Rollins College, and is presented here under two divisions in a some- what amplified form.. Professor Martin deals with the backgrounds, meaning the events of the year since the World War, in the first part of his book, and takes up existing conditions in Germany, Italy, and other nations in its latter part. There is little that is new in this book. The author's purpose seemed to be only to emphasize the need of understanding and interpretationr of the facts responsible for and exist- ing from dictatorships and democra- cies. He writes as a propagandist for peace and arbitration, a critic, not ,_ comlparale a L L1 1 5-ueyau 111 best. Whoever attempts to trace sys- tematically the growth of Shake- speare's creative power will find hims- self indebted to Murry's volume des- pite its many annoying vagaries. "BREAKING INTO ADVERTISING" Here is a book for 1936 graduates that gives sound information on how to get a job in the advertising business, always in need of new men and new ideas. Edited by WALTER HANLON. advertising authority. 56 KEY ADVERTISING EX- ECUTIVES tell how they got started in this fascinating and profitable profes- sion, and show you how to "land that first job." 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TUTO R tH r LETS 6G1# HERE IT 15 - COLL'p O UTL (NE SERIES: THE STUDENTS PRIMA tFAS5u ALL MY EXA S] TANX TO TH RIVATE TUTO TITLES IN Hi: College Outline Series Principles of Geolog~y Historyof Englan American Government United States to 1865 United States Since 1865 Principles of Economcs History of Education Statistical Methods First Year College Chemistry Outlines of Shakespeare's Plays History of Europe, 1500-1848 History of Europe. 1815-1935 Educational Psychology History of the Middle Ages History of the World Since 1914 Ancient, Medieval &,Modern History General Psychology General Forestry General Biology History of Englishliterature (to Dryden) First Year College Physics U 0 AIR I Alex Says 1 . . 1 ,d 1 ,. , E that U II U, IIIl 11 I