4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1921 Reviewing The Reviewers (By I. D. S.) and the remarks concerning it are anyone would have been arrested for writing 'Three Soldiers' was to ex- When Sinclair Lewis wrote 'Main extraordinarily varied, ranging from writing while the war was in progress. pose what he considered a nation- Street' he stepped into a fair sized utter damnation, through a long It purports to be the 'Now It Can be wide injustice, he seems to this re- hornet's nest. The 'Main Street' hub- stretch of praise with reservations, Told' of the enlisted man in the Am- viewer to have achieved a nation-wide hub has kept up for almost a year, to unqaulified approval. erican armies. It is either a base insult." but we may expect it soon to be quiet- The New York Times book review libel or a hideous truth. .It is so In much the same tenor is the or- ed as the frenzied discussion of John section, usually a quiet and spineless savagely explicit in its accusations ticle, "One Soldier On "'Three Sol- Dos Passos's war novel, 'Three Sol- sheet, has risen from its hibernation that it deserves no quarter at the diers' ", by Harold Norman Denny diers,' gains in mpmentum. Dos Pas- and has led the attack on "Three Sol- hands of the reading public. You, which appeared in The Times the fol- sos, a young author who drove an diers" with two front pdge reviews. must be either for or against it." He lowing week. Denny accuses Dos Pas- ambulance during the war, has paint- The first is by Coningsby Dawson then goes on to show why he is sos of "combing the army for every ed a graphic, if not a pretty, picture who, after passing out such martial against it. He says the men it de- rotten incident that happened, could of the struggle, and has shown how lollypops as "Carry On" and "Out to picted were "spineless, self-centred have happened, or could be imagined it has completely crushed three sol- Win," naturally has to defend his weaklings" and that "they got out of as'having happened, and welding it diers, especially John Andrews the position by hurling imprecations at the war what they brought to it-- into a compelling narrative." Denny artist ,who is the hero of the novel. such a materialistic description of low ideals and bitterness." He con- then proceeds to look up Dos Passos's Already the Pook bas been reviewed war as that of Mr. Dos Passos's. "This cludes with the statement: "If the war record. Being rather surprised by nearly every critic in the country is the kind of a book," he says "that purpose of Mr. John Dos Passos in to find that the latter was by no means a slacker, he tries nevertheless to dis- parage the author by a comparison of war records, a rather cheap way of belittling Dos Passos. Denny is small- er than Dawson and his ethics are to be questioned when he indulges in personalities. His article ends with this: "Perhaps it is malicious to point it out, but the paper cover surround- ing 'Three Soldiers" is of an intense passionate yellow." I do not want to outdo Denny in smallness but it might be pertinent to point out that the cover in question is a bright and decided orange. Following the two embittered scribes of. The Times comes a host of more rational critics who praise the book with reservations. D. Kenneth Laub, the literary editor of The Detroit News, admires the story but believes it incomplete. "It is," he says, "just as if, instead of the photograph of the well-groomed, spectacled, apparently mild-mannered and not obviously soul- crushed, young man, with his hai; neatly parted, that adorns this page, we had used a hypothetical photo- graph taken after one of the drunken orgies he describes with the feeling of an artist and the exactitude of inti- mate knowledge, that photograph might be a true picture of Mr. Dos ~ -Passos in one aspect." Elizabeth Frazer, a special war cor- respondent for the Saturday Evening -- __Post, writing in the New Ygrk Globe, - _finds much the same fault. She sums it up in this matner: "The trouble with this well-written, brilliant, and often poignant and moving book is Thank the cold weater or that it is lop-sided. Its author did not see life in the army as an artist Bringing these Fine Coats! should see life anywhere, intensely and as a whole. He saw only one thing, and he saw that so passionately OW women will adore these handsome coats! that he was unable to see the rest of They're so luxurious in appearance, so stylish the circle at all. And the thing he in lines, made of such sumptuous materials and saw with such passionate intensity, artisticallytland resnted with such bitterness, so atrimmed, in many models was, in a word, restraint-He has strung together a series of distorted, T hey make one long for the stormy day, to exceptional, embittered episodes to re- f realize how cozy and protective they are. present the norm. In thus distorting Then they are so smart and becoming, with an air the real truth, he is, possibly, a good of style and character that no other garment can propagandist, but a bad artist, for he quit eqal. has judged as an artist in order to qui Qua prove his propagandist theme. Which is the chief defect in most propagand- Prices 25 to 75 it literature." Sidney Howard, a playwright and a member of the A. E. F., writing in the same paper, praises the book but wishes that the author "had loved life more immediately and less individual- ly." But "for all that," he hastens to say, "it is very nearly a great book and the war has not, I think, been better done in any other way." Walter Pritchard Eaton, reviewing