V. W. T ER S P E CT IV E S Pasc Seren WITH:Shi rer, Cronin, Knight, Eaton I worst blizzard of many years; he was going to run the British blockade. And run it he did to become the only American skipper commanding a man o' war on the high seas during the War of 1812. Captain Peabody was the lone naval unit able to carry out his com- mission, to harass the entire British fleet in every way possible. How he accomplished his work makes one of the most interesting tales of the sea written in modern times. It is true that C. S. Forrester's cap- tain is a fictional character, but it was men like Peabody that kept the falter- ing spirits of America high during the months of defeats on land, inaction, and the tremendous loss of business to the New England traders. Once past the blockade line, Captain Peabody turned to his work with the set determinism of a real Yankee. His ship was armed to the teeth, his men were a picked lot and eager to fight, everything was in order for the impos- sible. With the aid of a spy and two pri- vateers, a convoy headed for the West Indies was broken up and a good por- tion destroyed. Then the Delaware skipped about the "broad Atlantic" dodging, fighting and running, always just ahead of the British, and always raising the insurance rates at Lloyds. Finally stopped from fighting three British ships because they were all in the French territorial waters of Mar- tinique, Peabody and the captain of the British ships, Davenant, were forced to remain in the harbor of that island, for one must leave 24 hours apart from the other, and neither would give way to leaving last. But here too, Captain Peabody meets his future wife (future by three days)' and mixed with the struggle of the two captains is an honest love story, hon- estly told. The brine-soaked Peabody becomes distilled, and for the few short weeks he remains at Martinique, he is more than the captain of an Amerian fighting vessel, he is husband of a beautiful and fine French lady. To reveal the exact ending of the book would benefit no one, for though it has all the inevitability required for a good novel, it contains enough of the elements of suspense and surprise to keep the reader guessing until the last page. You'll just have to take my word for it, if you have any taste whatsoever for tales of the sea, you'll get forty fathoms worth in The Captain From Connecticut-. i - Eugene Mandeberg IIl Eat You Last By H. C. Branson, 302 p. Simon and Schuster, $2. 'Thee shall I eat last of all thy com- rades, and the others before thee. This shall be thy gift.' Thus, the gift of Polyphemus, the Cyclops, to Ulysses, and thus, too, the gift of the murderer in 1'l Eat You Last, first novel and fast- moving detective story, written by Ann Arborite, Henry Branson. John Bent, bearded investigator, is summoned to the scene of the sudden death of Corinne Maitland by grandiose, astute Senator Maitland, and as soon as Detective Bent begins to stick his nose into the affairs of the relatives and associates of the Senator, murder threatens. But through all the casual- ties, Bent retains his rational, ana- lytical manner, which brings him fin- ally to the end of the chase. Because there are no secret rooms, no madmen, dope fiends, or deserted country houses, because the scene is laid in the environs of a small college town, with even a dean in evidence, Henry Branson's book seems very much a little too much, in the realm of possibility. Hence, its reception de- pends upon whether the reader wants Perpectiuej Editors . . ...................... .......Joan Clement, Barbara deFries Fiction Editor ............................ ........... Eugene Mandeberg Poetry Editor .......................................... Harry M. Kelsey Review Editor - .........................................Virginia Graham Publications Editor ........................................Bill Baker Copy Editors ............................ Daniel Huyett, Fred M. Ginsberg Art Editor ...........................................Rosemary Aldrich Roving Editor .............................................Will E. Sapp Technical Adviser ......................................Karl Kessler Advisory Editor .................................. Albert Paul Blaustein onfritaiori Charles Wilson Douahtie writes po- etry and short stories as a hobby. Charles is a transfer from the Univer- sity of Virginia. This fall will mark the beginning of his junior year. At the present time he's enrolled in the School of Architecture; although he is very much interested in journalism. In this issue his poem, "Charleston Harbour," lends an intimate understanding of the South. Eugene Mandeberg is from Detroit and has worked on The Daily for a year and a half of the two years he's been at Michigan. Eugene is enrolled in the Literary College and when not writ- ing for The Daily, he spends much of his time working out plots and new angles for short stories. "A Form of Insur- ance" displays an understanding of journalism aptly applied to his creative work. Marion Allan is in the process of transferring to Michigan from Bradley in Peoria, Ill. Marion offers her con- tribution of "The Circus" to this issue of Perspectives. She is in the Literary Col- lege and has been offered a position on the staff of Illinois Quest, an Illinois State magazine. Marion is interested in short stories as a hobby and at the pres- ent time has not worked out a definite design for the future. Marguerite Graham is another native of Virginia. Her home is in Kenbridge. This summer she's taking graduate work in the Literary College. During the year, Marguerite keeps herself , busy teaching English in Blackstone College, which is a girls' school in Virginia. Writing, for her, is a relaxation and a pleasant pastime. There is a distinctive quality about Marguerite's poetry which has definite appeal. Frederick Granger has just entered his first year of law. Appropriately enough, he is especially interested in detective fiction. Fred transferred from Michigan State Normal and when at home, lives in Middleville, Mich. He re- vealed the fact that he is now working on a novel and refuses to classify writ- ing as merely a hobby. Incidentally, "Smokestacks," appearing in this issue, is not prose, but poetry, according to Fred. It displays much insight and un- derstanding. Frederick A. Peterson is exceedingly eccentric, or perhaps just modest. He writes for the sheer enjoyment derived from accumulating the facts and ac- centing the important in poetry form. It is his desire to leave Sandburg stuff to Sandburg and quietly paint pastoral scenes and impressions in appropriate images and rhythm devoid of crescen- does. Fred's home is in New York City and most of hi stime is devoted to en- gineering. Claire Chamberlain received her mas- ter's degree in English and is in gradu- ate school this summer. While working for her degree, she majored in creative writing. Claire's home is in Hartford, Mich., and she confesses that writing is her favorite pastime. In her four poems in this issue, there is a distinctive style of individualism found in her im- pressions. Claire has developed the art of compressing whatever she wishes to convey in the fewest possible words; hence, creating undeniable power, found in the simplest nuances. Bill Robbins is another poet-for-re- laxation whose poem, "Black Gang," ap- pears in this issue. Bill is in the School of Engineering and has chosen Naval Architecture as his special interest. He will enter his senior year this fall. Bill is an Ensign in the Navy and expects to be called at any time. He feels quite violently and terribly about everything and expresses himself in just that man- ner. "Black Gang" is a short poem made up of rather savage imagery and, appropriately enough, machine-like rhythms. Spencer Bidwell King, Jr., is a gradu- ate student at the University this sum- mer who formerly attained his master's degree in history at Vanderbilt and Pea- body universities. After that he at- tended Mercer University. At the pres- ent time, Spencer King is teaching his- tory at Mars Hill College in North Caro- lina. His essay appearing in Perspec- tives, paints a vivid picture in sparkling hues of the cultures of the French, Eng- lish, and German people. Spencer favors none, likewise, damning none. He merely presents a truly realistic pic- ture. His extensive knowledge of his- tory makes the essay vitally interesting and valuable to you as a reader. Sylvia Huxtable is a graduate of Hope College in Holland, Mich. However, she spent her freshman year at the Univer- sity. At Hope, Sylvia was president of the Writers' Club and literary editor of the Anchor, a college literary magazine. As a special honor she was awarded the silver key on that publication. After graduation from Hope College, Sylvia took special work at Ypsilanti, and dur- ing the winter months she is an instruc- tor at the Flint School for the Deaf. Sylvia is at the present time taking graduate work here and confesses that she's always been extremely interested in writing. You should undoubtedly enjoy her wistfully, philosophical essay, "Of Time and Tide" in this issue. [Fitanti The editors wish to thank Wahr's and Slater's for the loan of books reviewed in this issue. thrills or an analysis of straight facts. Frankly, I like a little of both, and I didn't find too much of the former in I'll Eat You Last. The story was too believable-like a police record, with all the people fitting nicely into a prosaic pattern of reality. Its characters are human beings, and, therefore, the book approaches tragedy. I don't think a detective story should do this: it should retain a sense of the unreal, the exotic, and convey the idea that 'this couldn't really happen.' This is the only criticism I have of this first novel. The author has handled his material well, and has made John Bent into a very able investigator. It is an above average first novel, but I. hope in his next, Mr. Bent wlil have to chase a fiend in the South of France instead of my next door neighbors. -Virginia Graham This Above All, by Erie Knight, 473 p. Harper and Brothers. $2.50. It was hard to realize that England was actually at war. One always thought of wars as being far away. "The front" as always being in some other land. Now it was England. This Above All by Eric Knight is a dynamic, deeply moving novel signifi- cant not only in its love story but also in its political authenticity; the first novel of any importance to come out of the war. For the first time, Eng- land is portrayed in all its economic poverty and tragic devastation,,devoid of the flag-waving of patriots and the adverse criticism of Communists and Fascists. The action of the story is compressed within a critical month-one month, which brings the war uncomfortably close. The older people have no im- pression either way. It is like seeing the first act of a play and not the rest. The younger people are eager to fight and just as ready to die if there seems to be any sense in it. But to Clive Briggs, absent with leave after the heroic evacuation of Dunkirk, there is no more sense in the war-he is convinced that lives are being wasted foolishly. So he decides to desert, feeling that he would be more of a deserter if he went back. Enmeshed in a war in which bombing raids and blackouts have become daily realities, the love affair between Clive and Prudence becomes a frenzied con- flict between the strong convictions of an experienced soldier and the equally strong convictions of a protected mem- ber of the upper class. But Prudence knows that in spite of Clive's bitter logic, he would not be dishonoring his own beliefs by going back and that eventually he will. In terms of this poignant and sincere love story, the true picture of stricken England is painted in shades of gray and black, a composite of all the classes of people, their political theories and contradictory reasoning. The drone of Nazi bombers over London, the crash of falling walls and the groans of suffo- cating victims are not used in the sense of cheap propaganda to arouse super- ficial sympathy but rather as a back- ground against which to place a man's realization of the true meaning of the war. If you believe England is fighting a lost cause, read This Above All, for there's a character in it that voices that opinion, or if you believe like Prudence that England is ineffable, intangible things worth dying for, you'll find satis- faction in this unforgettable novel. Ev- ery possible situation that could possibly occur in the furor and terror of a na- tion at war is revealed, and yet England, the whole of a thousand courageous parts, stands firmly in her most des- perate hour. -Barbara de Fries