'PE S PE C TIY VES P, F . t, A- i r, uL 1,; BOOKS,-T N SEASON I For Whom the Bell Tolls,. By Ernest Hemingway. Scribners, 1940, 82.75. I have sat here and stared at the typewriter for an hour now, and I still have no idea how to start this review. If only somehow I could get right into the middle of the thing, and skip the superlatives I'd be a lot better off, but when you write a review you have to say things like astounding and magnificent and great and none of it means any- thing because now anyone who buys a book, no matter what the book may be, fisnds those words pasted all over the dust jacket. I can say For Whom the Bell Tolls is as good as Grapes of Wrath, but that will make people who didn't like the Steinbeck book say, "oh, more of the proletariat" and I want to say here strongly no, you fools, not of the proletariat with Steinbeck nor with Hemingway, but of the nobility, not of the moneyed people no, nor of the del- icate intelligentsia, nor the palpitant soul of the artist in his neurotic strug- gle with life and himself, but the no- bility as it has been in the Bible, in barons and soldiers and martyrs and farmers and sailors, the nobility that does not always find the slick word or phrase ready to say what it feels, and so is regarded as unfit for literary con- sumption by the fragile ones, who never having seen bold artistic character de- lineation, heave sighs of secondary crit- icism for subtler, more intellectual over- tones of human emotion. I can say For Whom the Bell Tolls is Hemingway's best book, but that only means something to people who have read the earlier books and short stories, and marvelled that writing could be so tight and fine and ever true. Or, without trying to say anything general about the book, I can use its publication as a chance to argue the case of Hemingway and say more or less at random some things about himkthat seem to have bearing on his work, First, I think there is a change in Hemingway as he comes through in this book. I am not sure that it is a change for the better where he him- self is concerned, but it makes for tru- er writing than he has been able to do before. He has become humanized, he has without losing any of the hardness and precision of his thought, and with- out oozing sentiment from the pores, learned that such things as simple, blind peace, and deep surrounding love can exist, and finding that they exist, he has been able in the character of Robert Jordan to show that they cause a conflict between two good things as great as any conflict between good and bad can be. And he is not always the in- sistently virile muscle man he has some- times been accused of being. He doesn't exactly take a dive just because a pair of nice gold flecked gray eyes look at him the right way, but on the other hand he and Jordan realize just what a good life it would be to get back to Missoula and teach Spanish and live what the old Hemingway would perhaps have called a dull life for a long span of years with those eyes and the Maria who goes with them. You can't call Jordan weak b'ecause he figures this way, because Jodan goes out and dies, even knowing the attack he must help by blowing up the nemesis bridge must fail no matter what he does, dies for a cause yet knows the cause is his death and the death of many of the simple people he comes to like and respect during the three days in which the ac- tion of the book takes lllace. You do not call Jordan strong or weak, you call him a man,and let it go at that, and* maybe realize that there are not great men, great figures or legends perhaps, just as Jordan could become, but only in the final judging of things, men. Each of the main characters has in him a personal conflict, in Pablo a conflict between bravery, leadership, and wounded pride, unscrupulousness, knowledge that his band will be lost in Jordan's project; in Pilar a simpler yet a more complex battle, between rough goodness and old age, loss of attraction; in Anselmo there is hatred for killing always warring against necessity for killing; Maria lacks this conflict, Jor- dan's life is too much hers for there to be another side to her. She is basic woman; Pilar is not. Pilar carries the honors away from everyone, but re- alize she is not a type, not in the strict sense of the word a woman. She is strange, but real as Hemingway has done her. What makes her real is her desire and her jealousy, revealed brief- ly but importantly. Otherwise she would be freakish. In each minor character, the mem- bers of the guerilla band, the Russian army men at the Hotel Gaylord, El Sordo and his men, there is told or felt a similar straining, between universal cowardice in the face of death, and duty, resignation, Spanish death-hypnotism, or between the earnest and the cynical approach to the necessities and injus-. tices of warfare and discipline and the part even of a general that makes him wonder about things sometimes, and the part in these Russian generals and newspaper men which makes them won- der if they are not selling out the things they are fighting for. But when you get down to cases, though each person in this book would be a separate story, the greatness of the whole comes when there is no long- er any conflict, when as a group, these people whose complexity you have come to know during the first three fourths of the book, suddenly re- solve under the terrific strain of the job they have to do, into simple, one- sided machines, all working together toward the demolition of the bridge, none allowing what would be the weak- ness in the whole group effort to creep in even though each may still know that id tu(,f In the Money. By William Carlos Williams. New Directions Books, $2.50 If In the Money were merely the story of master printer Joe Stecher's struggle to establish himself in business against the forces of corrupt combines, it would be the year's best evidence of the fact that most doctors should stick to the ward rounds and leave fiction to the writers. But fortunately, both for Dr. Williams and his readers, the essence of the book is quite removed from the politics of trade and competition. Its heart is in the picture Williams draws of the daily family life of America's average people-the middle class. Whether or not what seems to me to be such a sustained diary of little events is worthy of the name of novel depends more or less upon the reader's taste and outlook. At any rate, In the Money is a fairly engaging book for those who are interested in ,people for the sake of people, and in characters who are con- sistently and livingly presented. The remarkable factor of In the Mon- ey is Williams' adept use of conversation and incident. It is entirely by means of conversation that he describes Joe and his wife, Gurlie. It is largely by present- ing the small happenings of a child's de- velopment that he convinces the reader of their children, brunette Lottie, aged five, and blonde, hellion, completely lov- able two-year-old Flossie. I recall o- where in the book that Williams resorts to a calculated use of the adjective. He doesn't tell you what the Stecher family the weakness is not really weakness. And it is in this subordination of self to an ideal, in the face of death and pain and even wondering about the worth of things, that makes this book of Hem- ingway's a triumph, a tragedy per- haps in Robert Jordan, in Maria, but a victory above any two people, no matter how much the reader may like them, a victory above the death of old Anselmo, above the loss of the Span- ish civil war or the single battle, for returning to the idea I started on ear- lier, this book shows humanity as noble, with all the hokum and mush removed, without pleading a Portia case for any- one, the part Hemingway leaves is noble. And too, for sheer power of writing, I don't know anything that will match the way those last pages grab onto your physical senses, make your breath come faster, you heart skip beats, your eyes strain at the page to swallow it all fast- er than an eye can read. The style of the book is noticeable until the last fifty pages, perhaps the only adverse criticism I have to make, but when old Hemingway cuts loose and starts her rolling, he's pretty colossal, let me tell you. People are saying they liked Fare- well to Arms better. If they can find me a piece of the earlier book that can match the suspense of the final chapters of For Whom the Bell Tolls I'll eat the pages. The suspense is not that of what. is going to happen; it is sheer well-here- we-go-and-may -God- go -with-us sus- pense of just what form physical vio- lence is going to take, and when the blow will come, the bomb fall, the bul- let whine, the flash blind. As to Hemingway's translation of the Spanish idiom, I'll have to take his word for it. It's bothersome as far as style is concerned, but on the other hand it gives rise to some of the most gorgeous and colorful swearing I have ever seen, yet could at the same time be read to that aunt of yours who tats. You may like your Hemingway with style; I like him plain, maybe just a drop of vine- gar. For Whom the Bell Tolls? Magni- ficent. - Jay McCormick is and does; rather he writes of their daily life and from it you come to know them far more intimately and complete- ly. German-born Joe is quiet, calm. steady, capable and unimaginative. Our- lie is sharp, outspoken; selfish, acutely acquisitive and unreasoning. Lottie is plain, serious and quiet. just beginning to read and never away from a book. The baby Flossie, with her awakening realization of the scope and possibilities of her world, is, in many respects, the outstanding character in the book. Upon her, Williams has lavished all his ob- vious love and knowledge of children, fostered in the pediatrician's close as- sociation with human life at its impres- sionable stage, and strengthened by his inherent appreciation of the true nature of man as a social animal. The children-but especially Flossie- steal every chapter, every scene, in which they appear. And the handling of Joe's attitude towards his children, the ap- proach to his admiration and love and wonder at having produced these lives, will live to Dr. Williains' credit so long as there is in mankind that inexplicable harmony with the mystery of young life and growth. It is but rarely that we find a man clearly and completely in sym- pathy with the relationship of very young children to the world of their elders. And it is even more rarely that such a man has the facility of communicating his feelings to others as Williams has done. For this, and for the picture he creates of average parental preoccupa- tion with the problems and demands of children, In the Money deserves high praise. (Continued on Page Twelve) Marxism is it Science By Max Eastman W. W. Norton & Company, $3.00 The signing of the Soviet-German pact has brought to an end the period of the popular front, and at the same time turned away from the Communists a very considerable number of the middle classes, especially the liberals and intel- lectuals, for whose benefit the popular front had been originally devised. The revulsion caused on the part of the lib- erals and intellectuals as to why they had been attracted to Communism in the first place and gradually led to a re-examination of the whole doctrine of communism. To be sure, not all the articles devoted to the topic approached the problem in the spirit it deserved; nasty gloating, personal animosities, and cries of betrayal composed more than half of the re-examinations: still, of the mass of material a few articles and books have stood out for their serious- ness of purpose, depth of analysis, and sobriety of approach. John Chamber- lain, Max Lerner, Granville Hicks, John Strachey, Edmund Wilson, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Sidney Hook have each contributed toward the beginnings of a new understanding of Marxism. Max Eastman's Marxism is it Science is an important addition to this re-evaluation of Marxism now going on. The line taken 'in Marxism .is .it Science is nothing new with Eastman. He has for a long time been carrying on an attack on the scientific pretensions of Marxism, and, though at one time os- tensibly a Trotskyite, was excommuni- cated by Trotsky himself for this very fault; just before Trotsky's death a split had taken place in the Fourth Inter- national, one of the major causes of which was the severe criticism of dialec- tical materialism made by Burnham and Eastman. In his role as the truly orth- odox Marxist, Trotsky regarded any at- tack on dialectics as an attack on the whole of Marxism; in this respect at least, he was in agreement with the Sta- linists. Eastman's argument may be simply stated as the accusation that Marxism. for all its pretensions to be scientific, is at bottom a religious movement since it predete'mines the end it wishes to achieve and then professes to find that the world inexorably moving toward that end. It is Eastman's contention that dialectical materialism is ultimately nothing more than a refurbished con- temporary eschatology, since it assumes that which must be demonstrated and then turns around to seek for examples which will substantiate the original assumptions. The world is seen as sym- pathetic to human aspirations and the whole movement of history proceeds in- evitably to the fulfillment of those as- pirations; salvation for the individual comes only as he identifies himself with the march of history. According to Eastman, Hegel's dialec- tical method was a highly sophisticated attempt to preserve the mysteries of re- ligion in the face of growing strength of science, and when Marx made dialec- tics the cornerstone of his method he took over the chialistic implications of the dialectics as well. Nor was this unin- tentional, says Eastman, since Marx wished to show that the emancipation of the proletariat was not only just but an integral part of the order of things. Con- sequently, the Marxist approach to the different disciplines is shot through and through with the desire and determina- tion to see in them confirmation of what has already been decided on be- forehand. Marx in truth stood tegel on his feet but the purpose of the two re- mained the same: (Continued on Page Twelve)