Garrett- ontague-Fitzgerald "-jHREE recent books of more than passng interest have Selections Range from came to this reviewer, touching on the areas of non-fiction, novel and shortN-tory.F ion toSho And Save Them for Pallbear- ers by James Garrett (Messner, $3.35, 320 pp.) arrives as one of the endless series of fictional treat- >roduced almost exclusively by most current additions to the ments of the theme of war as it young writers.) open - ended doctoral thesis of has settled in the minds and Joseph Waldmeier of Michigan rtistic consciences of young James Garrett is a graduate of State University who is devoting writers h m d MSU's department of journalism. himself to a study of the ideologi- experience has come through di- At seventeen Garrett joined the cal novel of World War II. srect participation in the practice Army and served for three years The book stands as one of the ci organized violence. (In our time as an Infantry rifleman in the latest in a long and predictably it is notable that war novels are ETO. lo Delight and Please your Feminine Heart! Foundations and Bras ;OSSARD WARNER TREE BALI JANTZEN WHIRLPOOL by Hollywood MAIDENFORM I House Coats and Ensembles Kaser Hose 1500-item questionnaire designed Novel to determine the reader's "Culture Quotient." The opening essay is excellent, tS t r illuminated on nearly every page by Montague's astonishingly broad and well-informed insights. The 1HE NOVEL, constructed around essay is of particular value in that the principal figure of Peter the author approaches and re-ap- t rproaches from several angles the Donauthrs backgcounhhases ofrequisite of humanity in the truly .eu.'b u .T cultured man. story is interesting for its realistic, direct approach to the realities of THE SECOND section is more a soldier's existence away from fun. The author has selected and under fire, fifty areas of human knowledge The love story the author un- and has offered thirty questions folds comes close to engaging the under each. These questions test reader's sympathies. And the ide- not only knowledge bfst attitude ology of the novel is clearly and as well. at times effectively implemented. As an illustration, under "Ana- However, what reduces the im- tomy and Physiology" he must be pact of a story with so many posi- able to identify the principal tive elements is a glibness in the blood-forming organ of the body, prose expression which could per- the hardest substance in the body, haps be traced to the author's and define precisely "aorta" "hor- journalistic training. The most mome" and "colostrum" as well dramatic moments in the story of as to give the "correct" answers to Peter Donatti's ultimate surrender questions like "Do you smoke?", to an innate compulsion which the "Do you take exercise?", "Are you war had revealed to him are re- a civilized and moderate 'drink- lated with the passable minimum er?", and "How often do you see of sincerity and originality of ex- your dentist for a check-up?" pression. Montague is the sole arbiter on The author's descriptive pass- these "attitude" questions, and ages, unfortunately, might serve one's score is weighted in accord- well as models of reportorial style. ance with the author's arbitrary In a work of fiction which at- standards. tempts to create and carry through There may be plenty of room a prisis believable people, stereo- for argument on many of these typical description of the type that questions relating to personal be- Garrett uses causes the narrative havior, yet Montague's standards, to falter and, ultimately, to lose on the whole, seem fair and rea- its guise of reality. sonable. Indeed, one might best feel gratitude for the chance to MONTAGUE, who has share the open perspective of a his fingers in many pies (his genuinely cultured individual. N TNa Ai s A last work was man: Million Years, a prim thropology) is the au new work entitled Th Man (World, $3.95, 28 This book is compo parts: an inquiry into can Cultural Status, i of a long essay by Mont Donald Yates, with the University's ment of Romance Lc is now teaching at State University. NO 2-2914 Y r~u rru r ~r - -' His First ner of an- 7" RE ARE two available edi- ithor of a tions of Arthur Mizener's new e Cultured election from the uncollected 4 PP. stories and essays of F. Scott Fitz' sed of two gerald. our Ameri- The Princeton University Li- n the form brary has at $5 a 226-page volume ague, and a which includes nine photographs from the Fitzgerald scrapbook in formerly the Princeton Library. s Depart- Scribners has a similar issue at anguages, $4.50 which carries the identical Michigan contents save for the exclusion of the nine illustrations. Compiler Mizener, Fitzgerald's principal bio- grapher to date, has given the collection the title of one of the most interesting essays contained herein: Afternoon of an Author. It is one of Mizener's purposes to show how carefully Fitzgerald worked over all of his published material, and toward that end he has reprinted in his collection only pieces that have never before re- ceived the grace of book publica- tion. It is his hope that in these representative stories and essays the constant talent and the con- scientiouscultivation of that talent will become evident to the reader. Indeed they do. ~&/QJ~~lra.GIFT t for Every Her On Your List! . 7 4 * ,,1 ti' t , 'r . ' 'o.,, ., ..1.,,.,m rte" *,, . - . . r. . You're sure to delight the bea "Miss" on your Christmas list of our smartly fashioned blouses iackets, handbags, gloves, hose, /icoats, umbrellas, carcoa/s, cos elry, housecoats, and robes. rt of any with ont , sweaters, slips, pet- tume jew- CAMPUS TOGS at 1111 S. U., ; Just 1 1/2 blocks from main shop IT IS an interesting selection: some of the early autobio- draphical Basil Duke Lee stories are here, several of the tragi- comical essays written at the peak of his notoriety in the mid 'twen- ties, the short story "One Trip Abroad"-little known, but im- portant in that it captures at an early moment that attitude that Fitzgerald was later to expand with great ambition into "Tender Is the Night"-and here, too, are three of the Pat Hobby stories produced late in the author's career. There are twenty selec- tions in all. Up until the publication of Afternoon of an Author only the four volumes of short stories Tales of the Jazz Age, Flap- pers and Philosophers, All the Sad Young Men, and Taps at Reveille, Edmund Wilson's col- lection titled The Crack Up, and Malcolm Cowley's Selected Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald were available to the general read- ing audience. Today, all but the Wilson and Cowley titles are out of print. This new volume answers a definite need. It becomes im- mediately a permanent and valu- able addition to any library of the works of Fitzgerald. -Donald A. Yates THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE I ^t 4 13v r, 11 .j t '. r wif : on Forest off S. U. opposite the Campus Theatre Page Four 3