THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 30, 1944 LITERARY PAGE Book Reviesw-Original Prose Every Sunday A NEW ANTHOLOGY Cross Section' Presents Writers in Drama, Fiction, and Poetry Sumner Wells Surveys World Political- Scene How an American SoughttOut His Pasl By DAVID STEVENSON NOTE-Received his B. A. from Michigan. Was awarded a Major Hopwood fiction award in 1943 eand is now working on his Master's Degree here. THE HISTORY OF ROME THANKS AND KINDRED MATTERS . . . Joseph Stanley Pennell. Scribner's. 363 pages. $2.75. THE NOVELS pour off the presses and we watch them come to make their little or larger splashes and disappear. Sometimes one comes along, like The History of Rome Hanks, of which we can say that if it dies soon, it didn't deserve to die soon and if it lasts that it was worthy of long life. Rome Hanks is a long, sprawlingr--- - book built around a variation of bers of Harrington's great grand- the frame or story-within-a-story father who was in Grant's Army technique. By the end of the bqok of Tennessee. we can recapitulate this frame as He goes to the brother of th follows, A young man named Lee great-grandfather who fought with Harrington is sitting at a desk gaz- the 86th North Carolina in Pick- ing at some sonnets he has written ett's Charge at Gettysburg. Als to the beautiful girl he loves. He he pieces together other informa- recalls how she was bored when he tion he has learned, tracing down told her about his great-grandfath- the route by which ruined lif ers and their part in the Civil War. after ruined life terminated in hi He was quite piqued by her bore- own-until he sits and gazes at dom because it reflects both on the four sonnets he has written himself and his ancestors. and finally reads aloud to the pic- Presumably-Pennell does not ture of the girl -who was bored. try to be clear about it-he sets WHILE PENNELL. may have ac- out to find out all he can about complished everything he set these ancestors. His search be- out to do, it cannot be said that comes, for him, more than a re- ' the result is faultless. If a persor vitalizing of history to offset the less capable of giving the illusion slight of the young wvoman. He of life to an odd and vast array of seeks the roots from which his characters had used the same ma- diseased body and his morbid, terial and devices, the critics would melancholic outlook came. He probably have a field day over his goes to the shack where Wagnal, corpse. His book is structurally eivil War surgeon and post war intricate, has little consecutive minister, lives. Wagnal knew narrative, and is overpopulated well both Rome Hanks and the with characters created out of the man who cheated him out of his Civil War and the Reconstruction. rightful military and civilian It is purposely cloudy (the author prestige and income, says so) in chronology and focus The young nifan drinks old Wag- of interest. One is not supposed tc nal's whiskey out of a communion know or care just who is talking goblet and listens while he wheezes or what is happening. out his tale of the Civil War, of But most of us have been spoil- his own life, and what he remem- See CIVIL WAR, Page 8 By ROBERT E. HAYDEN NOTE--Hayden was a major Hopwood winner in poetry in 1942. Received his B. A. from Wayne University, Detroit and his M. A. from the University last June. At present he is writing a nar- rative poem THE BLACK SPEAR which will be published this fall. CROSS-SECTION: A COLLECTION OF NEW AMERICAN WRITING. Edited by Edwin Seaver. 559 pp. New York: L. B. Fischer Co., $3,50. e, - e .s ,t -n ;t .t n n rf d s y e d e 1. r s 0 N THE INTRODUCTION to this anthology Seaver is careful to make clear that by the term "new American writing" he does not mean anything esoteric or philo- sophical; he means simply hitherto unpublished work by writers who are Americans. It is well that he has clarified his meaning, for oth- erise critics (whose chief diversion is hair-splitting) might challenge him as to the "newness"' of the writing he has selected. Cross Section does not represent any particularly new directions in American writing. There is no experimental"' work (in the New Directions sense) included. The native avant-gardists, with the ex- ception of the poet, Charles Henri Ford, are conspicuous by their ab- sence. The best of the fiction harks back technically to the twenties and thirties, , employing devices which were experimental during those decades but which are less so now, though still effective. This exterior resemblance to the work of the twenties and thirties has led some critics to minimize the sig-. nificance of this book on the grounds that it is merely a postlude to the literature of those periods. But this is hardly the case. For it contains neither the cynicism nor the belligerent social protest char- acteristic of those decades. It is rather difficult to say just what the prevailing mood of the literary forties, as here represented, is. It may be significant that the best stories and Arthur Miller's play, The Newest Qnd Best in Books Wen ow have shipments arriving constantly. Keep up with the current books. at 1 The Man Who Had All the Luck, deal with people who are in one way or another failures in life. Short stories and novelettes make up the bulk of Seaver's an- thology, with poetry constituting the next largest group. Dramatic writing is represented by two three-act plays, one by Arthur Miller, a former Hopwood winner; while the only example of critical writing is an essay by Stanley Ed- gar Hyman. On the whole, fiction comes off better than the other types of writ- ing included. There are stories that are merely competent, which rep- resent a good "job" of writing; there are two or three which seem to have originated in an inner compulsion. Only a few stories deal in any way with the present war, but the war is no more than a back- ground of disaster against which sertain moments in the lives of frustrated or unhappy individu- als are presented. Norman Mail- er's novelette, "A Calculus at Heaven," is the story of a small group of soldiers defending an island against the Japanese. The emphasis, however, is upon the inner strife within each man, and by a series of flashbacks we are shown strategic moments in his past. The Spanish Civil War pro- vides the background for Pru- dencio de Pereda's "Resurrec- tion." Here again, the central character, Mickito, isan unhap- py failure touched by war though not transformed by it. Richard Wright's "The Man Who Lived Underground," along with de Pereda's novelette, is another of the small number of stories in this anthology written genuinely from within. It is Perhaps the most im- pressive story in the collection. Utilizing again the fear-motif, which seems to be his preoccupa- tion, Wright has written a power- ful psychological study of a fugi- tive from justice who seeks haven in a sewer, who ,questions the val- ues of the world from which he has been driven and comes in the end to see them as false and worthy only of rejection. The harsh photo- graphic realism for which Wright is both praised and condemned is here employed to the full. But this is not the element which gives the story its real power. It is, rather, Wright's sharpness of insight into the ind of a tortured human being. He seems t'o be moving away from racial to universal implications. It is incidental that the man who lived underground was a Negro. SEVERAL STORIES deal with the Negro in one way or another. Carl Offord and Ralph Ellison, both Negroes, write of their own people with objectivity and the photographic realism which, for better or worse, is characteristic of American writing motivated by so- cial problems. Offord's insistence upon such details as the way an empty ash-can sounds when bang- ed against the pavement and the smell of garbage constitutes his chief fault, as it does in the case of other writers represented here, for imaginatively it adds nothing to the story or our understanding of life. BothJohn D. Weaver and Leonard Robinson in the stories, "Oak Shadows" and "Trouble Keeping Quiet" have chosen Negroes as their leading characters, and these, since they were written by white authors, indicate that the stereotypes and cliches which have vitiated so uch of the fiction about Negroes are being disposed of by serious writers. In this at least, Cross Section seems to be pointing a new direction. The poetry which Seaver has selected is disappointing in the amin. Both established poets, such as Oscar Williams, Lang- ston Hughes, Isidor Schneider, and Edwin Honig; anti newcom- ers, such as Robert Whittington, Helen Wolfert, Robert Tallman and Will Gibson have been in- cluded. Norman Rosten, former Michigan student and Hopwood winner, is represented with a poem, "Introduction," from a work in progress which in spite of mannerisms and echoes of Macleish is eloquent and vivid. Langston Hughes' three poems are poems only in the broadest and most uncritical sense-are little more, actually., than cartoons in verse. Robert Tallman's lyrics are, I think, the best among the youn- ger group, fusing as they do emo- tion and intellect. Jean Garrigue's three poems are written with intel- lectual vigor but fail emotionally. Robert Whittington's verse drama, "The Death of Garcia Lorca," is an experiment in the Lorca idiom. On the whole, intellection usurps the place of emotion and poetic insight, and few of these poets seem to be reacting dynamically to anything. Arthur Miller's play is a sensitive draam of a young man seeking the great Why of his world. Though it builds slowly in dramatic interest, By HENRY POPKIN NOTE-Received his B. A. from Brown in 1943 and was awarded a fellowship in English to the University last fall. He was granted his M. A. here in June and will begin work for his doctorate on a fellowship at Harvard in November. THE TIME FOR DECISION-Sumner Welles. 431 pps, Harper & Bros, $3.00. SUMNER WELLES' The Time for Decision presents o u r former Under-secretary of State's views on American foreign policy. It is not -precisely the "now-it-can-be-told" book that its jacket-blurb hints, but The Time for Decision is a sober, reasoned narrative and an- alysis of recent world history, with emphasis upon the American point of view. Welles sets forth explana- tions of motives and events which have not been fully understood. He excels in probing the whys and wherefores of things already known. Events which were shroud- SUMNER WELLES CORDELL HULL Wf4HR'S BOOKSTORES STATE STREET which Roosevelt permitted an em- bargo on arms to 'Loyalist Spain. By a strange volte-face, Welles condones later dealings w i t h Franco on ground of military ex- pediency; he has no comment on what our policy should be now that the expediency is over. Throughout the book Welles dis- plays the same extraordinary fi- delity to "expediency" and the same interest in ends rather than means. Thus he can excuse Sta- lin's non-aggression pact with Hitler and Chamberlain's appease- ment in 1938; he can justify our dealings with Darlan and our slighting of DeGaulle; he can find words of praise for those staunch partisans of democracy, Batista and Vargas; he can criticize our State Department's failure to rec- ognize the Fascist Farrell regime of Argentina. Liberal - minded Sumner Welles assuredly is, but put into operation, should be both permanent and effective. The former Undersecretary of State concludes with a scant fifty pages on "world organization", describing a permanent union of the United Nations. There would be an eleven-member Eixecutive Council, empowered to maintain peace with the aid of armed force. Welles envisages also an Agency of International Trusteeship, a World Court-and eventually a World Congress. His plans are ambitious. Prob- ably the least likely outcome of this war will be the adoption of so thorough and so feasible a con- ception of world organization. But the idea is excellent and should be considered by our peacemakers as an ideal to build upon or perhaps to build for. It should be noted that Welles' primary concern is with PEO- PLE, with the actual nationals of the countries of which he writes. He fully realizes that leaders, diplomats, and even eco- nomic forces alone cannot shape , events. Welles knows the im- portance of the human factor, of public will, public opinion, and public morale the world over. In almost every country, he finds that the government, good or bad, exists because its people want it. In Germany, "the con- tinuing loyalty of the bulk of the population is given to that military force controlled and guided by the German General Staff. H u m a n rehabilita- tion, as well as economic reha- bilitation, is necessary in Ger- many and Japan. In other ways, governments re- flect the needs and wants of their people. Thus, since the American people were isolationist, both Re- publican and Democratic Presi- dents had to be isolationist. The American people were misinformed about the Spanish Civil War, and the Neutrality Act was passed. Only proper dissemination of in- formation by authorized officials can direct American opinion cor- rectly. The Time for Decision is an im- portant book. It contains, despite some omissions, a most convenient, concise, and yet clear interpreta- tion of the background of our war and our coming peace. Welles knows the facts and knows which are the important facts as few men do. He does not tell all, but he tells enough to stimulate our think- ing about the kind of World we had and the kind of world we want. MAIN STREET II ed in genuine secrecy (and there must be many known to Mr. Welles) are not going to be dis- closed yet-at least not by Sumner Welles. Welles is content to inter- pret history and to offer his reme- dies for the world's ills. The book is by turns autobiographical, his- torical, analytical, and speculative. Welles begins with a straight narrative of the tragedy of world history from 1918 to 1940. He punctuates his account with. acrid comments on the want of decision among the victorious powers of World War I, the fail- ure to strengthen the League of Nations, the criminal ignorance of our own Coolidge and Kellogg, and the fatal blunders of the statesmen who let Hitler rise to mastery in Central Europe. Welles introduces some personal history here with a description of his own mission to Europe in 1940 when, at the President's re- quest, he sounded Mussolini, Hit- ler, Daladier, and Chamberlain on the prospects for an early peace. The replies h e received were what might have been ex- pected. The general result, as far as the book is concerned, is nothing very new, except for some excellent human interest pictures of a stoutly anti-Nazi Ciano straining to hold a faltering Mussolini in the ranks of non-belligerency and of the sadistic Anglophobe Ribben- trop exercising an almost hypnotic power over the "criminal para- noiac" Hitler. Welles writes more briefly and less interestingly of his encounters with the, less neurotic leaders of the democracies. With the conclusion of the hopeless mis- sion, Welles picks up the thread of history again. For the most part, Welles sanc- tions the foreign policy of Roose- velt and Hull. His most important criticism is of the "oversight" by he is a- shrewd professional diplo- mat as well and not exactly the apostle of liberalism that our press pictured at the time of his resig- nation. THE SECOND main section of the book takes the reader through each trouble spot of world politics. Welles painstak- ingly presents the issues at stakes and offers his own suggestions for future action . Welles attri- butes great'gains in Latin Amer- ica to the Roosevelt administra- tion. Our former Undersecretary of State seems to favor a silken- hand-in-the-silken-glove policy toward our neighbors to the south. It is just such a policy which has been working with great success. Less peaceful policies have only made enemies, Welles insists. WELLES' plans for Germany seem drastic, but the menaceis very real; the results, if Welles' way of action should be whgle-heartediy TYP EWR Bought, Rented Repaired 4 1 STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 6615 i BOB HOPE'S OWN STORY OF HIS T-IP ABROAD You can buy the paper edition for a dollar. The cloth bound de-luxe job will set you back two dollars. . . . Et . . FOGL LE T T'S , i l r4nn 4pbotj $,Pit 9amomm ?ej toupon t Make "The D 1 your extra-curricular activity ABOVE is a picture of the office you'll work in if you try out for any of the several staffs of The Michigan Daily. Your work will count on your war activities record; you'll have loads of fun and find it a fascinating job. i If you're the business type, then try out for the business staff. Develop your ability in salesmanship, business management, office work, or account- ing; and try your creative skill at advertising layout and design. If you like to write, and want to know what's "going on" on campus, then try out for The Daily editorial, sports, or women's staffs. FINE FOOD and genial hospitality are always present at the Aflenel. for important week-end dates, or dinner during the week, the Al- lenel is the place to go. "..- "- 3'I Come up and let us show you the ropes. The building is open from II f-% A . . n-,-)nA kA v. I._ ----------------I-- ii 1