TUE MtC lIGAN-DAILY Mildred Walker's Third Novel Finished Piece Of Writing 7 Dr. Norton's Wife' Study Of InCurable Hyma Produces New Analysis Of Christianity And Politics . Li Ex Libris Former HopwoodWinner Uses Scene On Campus For Story's Background DR. NORTON'S WIFE, by Mildred Walker. Harcourt, Brace and Co., New York. $2.50 By JOSEPH GIES This is Mildred Walker's third novel, her second since she was awarded a major Hopwood prize for Fireweed in 1933. She is no longer in the class of what are usually referred' to as young authors; Dr. Norton's Wife 's a mature piece of writing, carefully and intelligently put to- gether. The book is about a women with an incurable disease which is slowly ren- dering her a complete paralytic, and the phychological effects the disease, has on her and her husband. It cani readily be seen that this is a story) with possibilities. Mrs. Walker's treatment of it is admirable. What she seems to have succeeded in doing is to measure her own capabilities very accurately and fit her no el to them. She found she needed only 269 pages to tell her 'story, and consequently limited her- self to that number. A great novelist would doubtless have treated the same in twice the space, but so, I am led to believe, would a poor one. In other words, there may be room for improvement in Mrs. Walker's book,, but there i.n't much 'thatis unnec- essary or inconsequential, and that, I think, is the test of a good novel. Sue Norton was formerly one of those happy, hearty women who thoroughly enjoy life- in all its as- pects. Her marriage to Dan, a pro- fessor in the medical school of a scarcely disguised midwestern uni- versity, had been highly successful. They had been married nearly 20 years when her peculiar malady at-! (By Albert F. Gilnore in the Chris- proof that, as democracy, with its tian Science Monitor). acknowledged weaknesses, when hon- CHRISTIANITY AND POLITICS, by 'stly administered by an intelligent Albert Hyma, Ph.D. J. B. Lippin- eo eithe best form of human coaC.Nw ok 3 government yet devised; likewise that, Christianity, when practically The common saying that democ- applied, is the way to peace, racy is on trial is finding a parallel righteousness, and salvation. in the assertion, less common but Because of these obvious attacks nonetheless audible, that Christianity upon both democracy and Chris- itself is equally on trial. These chal- kianity today, Dr. Hyma, scholar,; 1enging statements arouse defenders Christian, and patriot, traces the re- of both institutions, of democratic lation of Church and State from the government and of Christendom, not 'eginnings of the Christian era to; alone to deny the truthfulness of the the present, thus bringing vividly assertion but better still to prove to present view the unending strug- their falsity by example, by concrete gle to preserve the former, while pro-f - moting the welfare of the populace tacked her. As the disease progresses, through the propagation of the latter. she gradually becomes aware, in spite Through the early centuries, the of the pretended optimism of her Middle Ages, and to the present day. husband, that there is no hope for the discussion is carried, a develop- recovery. The mental torture she ment which should arouse its readers experiences with the realization that to the dangers to democracy now im- she can never again be anything but inent from ideologies that not alone a living corpse, unable to control her substitute the will of an individual or 1movements or her speech, with her a group for the voice of the people, paralysis enveloping her by inexor- but strike at the very foundation of able degrees, is Mrs. Walker's chief Christianitj by promoting godless accomplishment.t theories that smack strongly of pa- Fine as the picture of Sue's suf- ganism. The material is exalted above fering is, it is equalled by that of her the spiritual. In fact, spiritual wor- husband's. Dan Norton is about 45, ship and welfare are deeply buried in still young at heart, successful and a national selfishness which blinds respected. His chief characteristic, the populace to all but the exalta- carefully and subtly developed by the tion of state and race. The result, as authbr, is a sober and intellectual Dr. Hyma makes clear, is a terrific disease does not drive him either to assault upon democracy everywhere. Ian emotional break-down or to one Especially in the American countries, of the accepted forms of escapism. Central and South. is being carried His problem is complicated as is on a bombardment of imported Sue's, by the presence in the house brands of so-called liberalism and Sues, y te pesece n te husehalf-baked political and religious of Jean, Sue's younger sister, who theorie whi iand regs constantly reminds both of them of theories which find lodgment in rest- what Sue once 'was. less and receptive mnentalities.n th what ue oce ws. IA situation is thrown upon the There is a hint of deus ex machina screen of popular thought which in the resolution of the plot, but the should be met and refuted by Church episode which concludes the story is and State: the former, in a re-ex- so skillfully and economically treated amination of the foundations of that there should not be much dif- Christianity; the latter, by re-af- ficulty with this, The conventionality firmiation of the builders who laid a of the ending is also screened by the base of government in the solid foun- fact that one or two rather obvious dation of well-being for all the peo- and weak alternatives were avoided. ple, for high and low alike. BY JOSEPH GIES During vacation I received a com- munication from Granville Hicksj which should finish up the Gateway! to History controversy. It is in the form of a copy of a letter sent by Professor Nevins to The New York Times Book Supplement which runs as follows: 'Alias The Pror Proves 200 F ALIAS THE PROMISED LAND, by S. Gordon Gurwit, New York, John H. Hopkins, Inc., New York. $2.50.1 There is a very nice binding on Alias the Promised Land. It is blue, stamped in gold, and at the top andj bottom there are light blue decora- tive borders. True the jacket il- lustration is more like something I once saw on an Anthony Trollope novel than the symbolic land of dreams it might have been intended to represent, but there are some trees in the right foreground, and one ex- cuses amateurs much. It is my firm opinion that everyone is entitled to his own hobby. The illustration at any rate does manage to catch some- how the spirit of the book itself, with "May I use your columns for a statement and a correction? In my recent volume "The Gateway to History" I illustrated one point by reference to "the writer on John Reed who, glorifying him as a staunch revolutionist, was informed before publishing his book of the existence of letters that John Reed had written fron Russia shortly be ore his death expressing a keen disillusionment with the Russian Revolution, and who ignored them." As. source for the statement in the text I had (as I possess documentary evidence to show) statements by two writers and scholars of high repute. One of them, a leading literary critic and editor, pro- fessed to know the holder of the letters. But inquiry has satisfied me that he was mistaken and that the story bears no relation to known facts. In later printings the passage will suffer the fate of DuMaurier's character Joe Sibley in the later editors of "Tribly"-it will be withdrawn. "Very truly yours, "Allan Nevns." sonable facsimile thereof. The last Sised Land' ages of the book are virgin ter- rni s d La d' iritory, and will remain so unless someone wants to borrow my copy ages Too Long to make paper airplanes with. Hard-soft Heroine That's enough for the blurbs. Let's its cloudy motif in the upper por- turn to the types who dominate the tions, its' tall, ornate towers, and its 'canvas scenery of the piece itself. rich, rich greens everywhere. Sue, daughter- of a vaudeville ma- "This is the intensely provocative gician-card sharp, may be called the story, swift, passionate, young, of and. then hard, and then soft, and Sthree,modern pirates: A beautiful, then hard, and then soft. She is also young golddigger, without a scruple, said to be very beautiful, and runs a card sharp and a potential killer, a coffee shop in a small college town who go in search of 'The Promised where the Colonel, her papa, holds Land,'" runs the blurb inside the forth in the back room. "taking the front cover. There are quite a few boys for a ride," as the New York more commas in the statement than toughs would have it. The Colonel I am accustomed to digesting in the himself poses as a gentleman author course of one of my prosaic days, and doing things about the Civil War. To I gag politely over the "intensely pro- add to the effect, and to ward off the vocative story, swift, passionate" bit, questions of young intellectuals in but with the word "young" used as a the college who might discover the descriptive adjective here I have no fraud if they inquired too deeply into quarrel. That represents the classic the ,extent of the old crook's knowl- touch in the blurb. edge of the great-war-between-the- A Slam At Cinema states, the Colonel affects handlebar The blurb on the inside of the back moustaches, and speaks with a cover concludes with, "You will, per- "Suth'n" accent. In the part I read, haps, find humor here, and maybe he had already become one of the tears; but certainly, you will find en- town's leading citizens, having fooled tertainment as absorbing as the lat- the best of 'em. Maybe Gurwit is off est screen production." There speaks in some small town this very minute a publisher who doesn't like the cheating at cards, and posing as a movies. Justifiable as the statement gentleman author. Maybe. may be, he may wake up with a libel Bill Ware is supposed to be a tough suit on his hands one of these days, egg, but Sue knows different. His with Sam Goldwyn toeing the rub- father is in jail, sent there unjustly ber and winding up. by the unscrupulous maneuverings of If Mr. Gurwit was trying to be the father of Cal, the other main funny when he wrote this book he q, man as far as Sue's emotional flopped. The cliche is only really life is concerned, funny when employed by a sure There they are. What happens to hand at the game such as S. J. Perel- them after page 180, I don't know, man, and from the 180 pages I read and needless to say I don't care. I am prepared to say that Alias the Neither will you, reader, neither will Promised Land would appeal only you. to a mind like Perleman's or a rea- --Jav McCormick. / note: "In other words, Mr. Nevins now acknowledges that, so far as he knows, no such letters exist. The, matter, as far as I am concerned, is closed. (Signed) G.H." s r S f The matter is also closed as far as the Daily is concerned. From the cor- respondence which has come into my possession, I should judge that a minimum of censure should be at- tached to Professor Nevins for the slander of Mr. Hicks. It seems to me somewhat unfortunate that the real culprits are not going to be brought very vigorously to literary justice. Ethics restrain Professor Nevins fLom mentioning their names in his letter to the Times, and as far as I know, the name of only one of them (Ber- nard DeVoto) has appeared in print anywhere-in the Michigan Daily. i f .f 1 t . i 4 3 .f .1 ,t t .l t At the end of the copy Mr. has appended the following Hick brie I;u Cb iilillll 11116 1 GI IGi1lal;l 0 'Vl " 1lwck- - 41W.7 vXU~~llll~i1. 1 , II , ." . *° :: ' % , ; . .. .,': )Ou, Too CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING will cut ON io-olia - i FOR RENT FOR RENT-3 rooms and bath with use of kitchen in fine home one milcs from campus. Garage avail- ablh. Call 2-2102. 278 FOR RENT-Choice front double rIccn for men at 929 Church street.I Continuous hot water, and shower. 285 FOR RENT-Nicely furnished suite with bath for 3 men. 928 Forest.. FOR RENT--Rooms for University men-Gentiles. Large, double, new furniture, inner spring mattresses, 3 showers, recreation room.'807 S. State. Tel. 4844. 288 FOR RENT-Clean and comfortable room; for boys. 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