TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 2, 1944 LITERA RY PAGE Book Reviews-Original Prose Every Sunday I Journalist Presents a GlorifiCateion of Russia THE TEMPERING OF RUSSIA. By Ilya Ehrenburg. 356 pp. Alfred A. Knopf. $3.00. By HENRY POPKIN ILYA EHRENBURG'S The Tem- pering of Russia is a Russian journalist's account of the first thirteen months of Hitler's war with Russia. Ehrenburg is famil- iar to American readers as one of the leading Soviet novelists, author of The Love of Jeanne Ney and the recent success The Fall of Paris. In The Tempering of Russia he is no more than a newspaperman, some- times a war correspondent, some- times an editorial writer, usually a combination of both. In his own words: "I became a journalist, only a journalist, whose place is on the firing line." Literary art is forgot- ten for the sake of propaganda and human interest. Ehrenburg is an artist only occasionally an, almost. unintentionally. The separate articles that make up The Tempering of Russia are collected from Ehrenburg's writ- ings during the first German on- slaught against Russia. They are assembled in chronological order. Together they tell a story of in- credible Russian heroism and of stupid, unfeeling German bestial- ity. Ehrenburg's incidents of the heroic Russian defense are often gripping and intense. The crimes of the invaders are painted in vivid, almost lurid, colors. As is to be expected, the Russians and the Germans are pictured as aul white against all black, spotless virtue and uncompromising val- or opposed to irredeemable vil- lainy and cowardice. Ehrenburg seems to have found no Russians failing their cause, no Germans worthy of being called gallant enemies. As a whole and as indi- viduals, the Russians are good and the Germans are bad. Ehr- enburg bulwarks this generaliza- tion with hundreds of incidents of the war. We find Russians destroying themselves to kill more of the enemy, demolishing their own bridges and buildings to halt "the German," working impossible hours to manufacture the tools of war. We read of Germans who list their triumphs according to the food they steal, who butcher women and chil- dren, W'ho destroy the monu- ments of Chopin, Voltaire, Rous- seau and Tolstoy. Taken in small quantities, The Tempering of Russia, is still good fare. Read it all at once, it can become a monotonous parade of the impossible heroics of Russian Partisans and regular troops and of the barbaric cruelties and crud- ities of German soldiers. I am not denying Ehrenburg's right to his point of view, nor do ,I deny the importance and the interest of his anecdotes. I do, however, deplore his lack of restraint and his me- thodical compilation of very simi- lar incidents. Ehrenburg might have done well to find a few differ- ent ways of saying the same thing. DESPITE these occasional repe- titions of the same theme, The Tempering of Russia is usually a very absorbing book and an im- portant one as well, for its revela- tion of the Russian soul under fire. The Russians can take it, and they can come back for more. Better than that, they can come back to win. Ehrenburg's book is a glorifica- tion of Russia and of the Russians. Fired not so much by political be- lief but rather by love of their native land and by their own in- domitable will, the Russian people are united as they never were be- fore. Ehrenburg helps to explain how and why the Russians are fighting as they are. Certainly there is something unusual and exceptional going on when what -was considered to be the greatest army in history is, after more than three years of war, back on its own borders. The Tempering of Russia helps to tell us why Germany is the latest frontier of Hitler's army. A War Novel Casual Heroics in 'A Walk in the Sun' A WALK IN THE SUN. Harry Brown. Knopf. 187 pages. $2.641. By DAVID STEVENSON SOMEHOW it has become a max- im among us that the classic literature of our war cannot be written until a cooling-off period of peace has elapsed, but A Walk in the Sun is proof to the con- trary. It would be false to say that this short novel is another War and Peace, another Red Badge of Cour- age, or even another Three Soldiers because it is a masterpiece of an- other sort. One of its virtues is that its auth- or does not, as so many modern writers have done, turn himself in- side out to be tough, bloody, and obscene. Neither does he fall into the opposite gutter of sentimental- ity and what will, in a few years, take on the tarnish of banal patri- otism. He has written an unpre- tentious story about men made quite casually heroic by the cir- cumstances of war and he has done it as well as any writer I know has done with any subject matter.4 Perhaps the key to this novel's apparent perfection is its sus- pense, although a ,review of its plot does not answer why this factor is of such force. The situ- ation is simple enough: A plat- oon has a particular minor but hazardous assignment to do and the book is the story of how it is carried out. In a sense Private Brown has gone along a road sowed thick with land mines and has avoided them all. He might have pestered up with a couple hundred pages of flashback material about his char- acters, or he might have put ro- bot characters in and smeared them with heroism, but without going to either extreme he has created exceptional characters which are complete but not over drawn. There is scarcely a book in exist- ence that has nothing in it that an industrious reviewer or critic might not nose out and howl about, and there are many excellent books. The novel in question has a paragraph-and maybe more- that we could do without, but in its entirely it is so nearly perfect, both technically and from a pure- ly reading standpoint, that it would be a pretty small man who would cite its infinitely minor flaws. New Books of Poetry By 'Benet and Rukeyser Stern's #, .1 Ciongraiu/ttti! We extend to The Daily Staff our heartiest congrat- ulations on the inauguration of their new literary ven- ture. A long-felt need has been answered. It has been our privilege to open our stock to the reviewers and we hope_ we can continue this in the'yeatrs to come. TWO NEW BOOKS OF POETRY: DAY OF DELIVERANCE. By William Rose Benet. Knopf. 148 pp. $2.50. BEAST IN VIEW. By Muriel Rukeyser. Doubleday-Doran. 99 pp. .$2.00. By ROBERT E. HAYDEN WILLIAM ROSE Benet's new book of poems, subtitled A Book of Poems in Wartime, is a sincere, and sometimes passionate "contribution to the war effort." Its propagandic value is consider- able; its value as poetry is slight. Many of the poems in this vol- ume have the timeliness and im- mediacy of patriotic newspaper verse and represent thevmajority opinion in regard to the values for which this war is being fought. Benet as a poet says little to us that news commentators and edit- orialists have not already said. For all his rhetoric about the hor- ror of Bataan and Tarawa, he has not looked deeply at the spiritual horrors of war. His verse is facile and marked by the technical vir- tuosity which in the past has made him an "interesting" poet rather than an inspiring one. Yet this is a book which will satisfy those who believe that the function of the poet inbwar-time is, obviously, to write about the war and write in such unequivocal terms that it will justify the poet's existence in a world at war and convince G. I. Joe and Civilian John Doe that poetry after all is not entirely useless. M URIEL Rukeyser's Beast in View is the very antithesis of Benet's collection and super- ior to it in every way. For here is poetry, not facile versifying, and poetry that is tough-sinew- ed and glittering-bodied. One almost prefers Miss Rukeyser's failures to the elder poet's easy successes. Miss Rukeyser is one of the most richly endowed and provocative poets of our time, and her growth from book to book has. been con- tinuous. The social consciousness manifested in her first two books, Theory of Flight and U. S. 1. has matured into a social vision that comprehends both the sickness of the contemporary world and the sources of its cure. The abstract- ness of A Turning Wind, while not entirely absent from the pres- ent volume, is modified by utter- ances more personal now than they have been since Theory of Flight. Never guilty of writing Marxist propaganda, though avow- edly a Marxist, Miss Rukeyser seems now less concerned with Anthology Is_ Too Limited THE GREEN CONTINENT, A Compre- hensive View of Latin America by its leading Writers. Edited by German Areinieaas. . By CONSTANCE ANN TABER PEOPLE in the United States have been in the habit of cas- ually lumping all the countries south of the Rio Grande into one vast political and cultural unit known as "South America." And this grave misconception has been fringed by, a paper-lace of naive and romantic notions about a land of guitars and revolutions. The ideas are obviously absurd-and unfortunately common. The Green Continent is the lat- est of many recent books which attempt to destroy this myth and reveal Latin America for what it really is-a collection of countries so sharply differing from one an- other as to seem on separate plan- ets. This anthology, edited by the brilliant Colombian author Ger- man Arcinieaas, claims to be a "comprehensive view" of Latin America are represented. But the view is by no means comprehen- sive. The selections are excellent in themselves and the translations usually good. Estrara's delicate word-etching of Mexico City is exquisitely done, Carrion's "Ata- huallpa" paints the Inca leader with vivid, glowing strokes, and- no one can match Guzman's swift, dramatic portrait of the Mexican rebel Pancho Villa. THE READER learns something about the diversity of Latin countries, to be sure. He glimpses a scene here and there from their history, sees one or two famous men, visits a glittering metropolis, walks through a jungle. He does not get a "comprehensive view." It is unfortunate that this anthol- ogy was not enlarged (it is a small volume) to cover its field more ade- quately or else restricted to one aspect of life or history. The most valuable portions of the book are the brief connect- ing essays written by the editor. German Arciniegas has a stimu- lating mind and a skilful pen extrinsic, political values than with those that are intrinsic and spirit- ual. Beast in View is perhaps her most affirmative book; yet the af- firmation has not been easily achieved. For this poet has seen the cities burning and known the anguish of loss through war and through a system of things that permits a wastage of life and a distortion of human values. The faith in life and in the pow- er of love which Miss Rukeyser- reveals in Beast in View is faith desperately clung to in the midst of "tainted weather," "black blood,'' and "a broken world." In the poem, "Ajanta," which refers to the caves of that name in India, whose walls are covered by a fresco picturing "the real world where everything is complete," the poet seeks a moment of peace and as- surance through a contemplation of those ancient walls. For there actuality is accepted and used as the basis of creation; the mean- ings stand clear; "everything is itself." Yet the contrast between Ajanta and the world of misery and terror to which she must re- turn inspires no desire to retreat from reality or to endure it with a fatalistic acceptance; Ajanta sus- tains her belief in the possibilities of a more orderly and meaningful world. Pessimism and fatalism are for- eign to the poet. "Life is too strong to kill," she says in "Suicide Blues." And in the sonnet, "Who in One Lifetime," and the lyric, "Gift Poem," she celebrates belief in the midst of negation and sees herself standing in the midst of ruin and desolation "a childless goddess of fertility." "THE River Elegy," one of a ser- ies of elegies begun in her preceding volume, A Turning Wind, is a poem of tremendous power and implication. It is here that she most forcefully unites in- tellect and emotion, the actual and the symbolical. She is pas- sionately moved by the betrayal, the world-darkness which have been the heritage of the present generation and cries that "Only the meanings can remain alive." Miss Rukeyser's personal lyrics are less successful than the other poems in her collection. A poet who feels with the intellect rath- er than the heart, she is unable to achieve that immediacy and warmth of emotion which the ly- ric should have. Many readers, and at least one critic, find Miss Rukeyser's most recent work difficult and incom- municative. The charge is fre- quently made that she often does not write poetry at all but an in- tensified prose, although that charge cannot be made against Beast in View. There is no deny- ing the obscurity of references in, several of the poems in A Turning Wind and in the personal lyrics of her latest book. For like Eliot and Yeats she is a symbolist, and her symbols are not always clear. Yet she never makes a rebus of a poem; she does not wilfully ob- scure or permit herself the indul- gence of an eccentric erudition. Hence even her most difficult po- ems are richer in experience and implication than is at first appar- ent. Technically Muriel Rukeyser's poetry is subtle and complex. The apparent prosiness of some of her work arises often as not from her attempt to present actuality, with- out benefit of metaphor, in such compelling and vivid terms that it becomes symbolical. This has been her major problem and accounts in part for both her failure and her success. Trumpet Voluntary' Is New Book of Reminiscences I _ lb/ne TRUMPET VOLUNTARY. G. B. Stern. 387 pages. MacMillan. $2.75. By VIRGINIA LaRUE . B. STERN has added to the autobiographical welter of to- day a third volume of her personal reminiscences. Trumpet Voluntary is not precisely a sequel to Mono- gram and Another Part of the For- est, but it is a_ companion piece. The bulk of the three together hints that it might be possible for Miss Stern to'go on reminiscing in- definitely, and that memoirs of the kind she indulges in are not diffi- cult to write. The essays are not as informal and familiar as they are meant to appear, however; they are mannered, and carefully plan- ned to convey a noble message through a series of delicate sym- bols. Trumpet Voluntary has been written in England during the war, but it is very much like Miss Stern's earlier works: she attempts to respond sensitively to the situa- tion, but her writing is still a whimsical mirror of herself, and not of England. Nothing newly ro- bust or moving has been added. The technique of the essays is exaggerated, and their flavor sug- ary. Their theme is Life Trium- phant,, the willow herb growing brightly in the ruins of London, the phrases of music which (like Purcell's Trumpet Voluntary) are clarion calls to humanity. But this is illustrated by a series of objects, of scenes, and experiences, which do not amount to much more than a sentimental list of "the things I love." Miss Stern appears to have reacted quickly to any number of these things, but in spite of her enthusiasm she does not seem to have been deeply affected, and neither are we. This is partly because her pas- tiche is unsuccessful. She has tried to merge styles and sub- jects which will not go together, and to force. something of moral value to emerge. Such a mixture may be the stuff of life, but it disintegrates in any atmosphere so arty as that of Trumpet Vol- totary, where banter is intended to suggest deep, paradoxical thinking, and where the somber incidents of war are alternated with the antics of "our marma- lade cat," or with quotations of poetry like the rather trashy ones from Harold Monro. The variety which is essential to a work of this sort is lost in its lack of unity: the devices which hold the book together are re- grettably obvious. Miss Stern's approach, however, is an element which does not vary. She is fanciful, and some of her fancies, like those about the view of the Military Tailors, for in- stance, or those on the fragments of forgotten dreams, we are very willing to share. Moreover, some of her descriptions of Europe be- fore the war, and especially of southern France, will make the initiated nostalgic and the unini- tiated very jealous indeed. If our own friends talked to us like this we would probably consider them talented and clever.But in print we demand something more; we object to a work which insists that every passing thought of the au- thor was too precious to ignore. Writers today talk too easily about themselves, and there is no reason why the material of Trumpet Vol- untary could not be pruned and incorporated more tastefully in novels. MISS STERN'S outlook is, more than positive; her life appears triumphant as those of the women in the Matriarch series, if similarly unprofound. But it is typical of the way she reduces everything to the trivial that she chooses to symbolize this triumph by a little figurine, a swaggering china monkey with a trumpet. No very glorious volun- tary can be sounded on a toy. Keep A-Head of Your Hair Our modern services are avail- able for your inspection. THE DASCOLA BARBERS Between State & Mich. Theatres AT ANN ARBOR'S MOST FAMOUS RESTAURANT Where food is delicious and at- mosphere is hospitable. When you are away from home you'll appreciate cooking in the Spe- cial Allenel way. For Dates the Allenel is TIHE Place to go! The .lene/ /4'tel WAHIf'S 8" 0 0, StO0RkE 316 SOUTH STATE STREET - IHIGA ~~- TH E MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION * 126 EAST HURON PHONE 4241 ANN ARBOR, MICH. SUNDAY, AUG. 13, 1944 ballroom. For the semi- formal dance Army and Navy personnel were granted midnight liberty. Sponsors of the dance, which featured Ralph Wil- son's band, were the Bomber Scholarship Com- mittee and Junior Girls Project. *. * * 450 BLOOD DONORS have been requested from the University to fill Wash- tenaw County's entire Sep- tember quota. This is the largest number which the University has been as- signed since the beginning of the Blood Bank drives. Previous quotas have been filled and exceeded during the fall and spring seme- sters. "Just as it has been necessary to increase our expeditionary forces as the fronts expanded, with the need for blood plasma growing propor- tionately, it is necessary to fill and go beyond an in- crease quota," Sandy Per- lis, USNR, chairman of the drive, said. ** * . DR. JAMES B. KENNA, former minister of Seat- i la'T nivrsrityrMethodist to be held Aug. 24-27 at Great Lakes, Ill. Mann has entered Charlie Fries, Mert Church, Gordon Pulford, and Bill Kogen, freestylers, and breast-stroker Heini Kessler in the meet as well as several of his youth-' ful proteges from Camp Chikopi in Ontario which the Wolverine tank mentor directs. A WIDESPREAD SHAKEUP of the Michi- gan coaching staff, result- ing in the dismissal of Coaches Ray Courtright, Eddie Lowrey and Chester Stackhouse, taking effect before the coming sports season was announced Tu- esday by the men involv- ed. Courtright, whose wrestling and golf teams both brought Western Conference championships to Ann Arbor this past year, said that he under- stood the shakeup was made in the interests of economy, and Lowrey and Stackhouse confirmed the opinion. Lowrey, veteran of 17 years as Wolverine hockey coach and also manager of the Coliseum, commented. "I knew it - __. .. FuINE BO AT BARGAIN P 'RICES [NEW REPRINTS A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN-Betty Smith THE SUN IS MY UNDOING-Marguerite Steen THIS Is MY BEST-Whit Burnett ....... . $1.49 1.98 1.98 MAKING IT LAST-Mrs. Mildred C. Reniff of Ash- field, Mass., waves from her 1914 model T Ford. Heeding the federal government's advice to make, cars last as long as possible, Mrs. Reniff had this buggy put in shape. BASIC HISTORY OF THE UNTED STATES-Charles and-Mary Beard CARE OF POSTMASTER-Cpl. St. George ... CHICKEN EVERY SUNDAY-Rosenmary Taylor. NEWS OF THE NATION-Hoffman & Grattan. PARIS UNDERGROUND-Shiber .. . . . .. . . .,. .69 1.00 1.00 3.49 1.00 ashevski - Westfall' trio which scourged the West- ern Conference three years ago, has decided to play nr fAnthl with the De- nating the controversy not only as to whether he would play for, Michigan but also as to his eligibility under Big' Ten wartime II II " ' Ii II