Show c 10 -- Escapist’ Returns HOLLIS E : BANNER Pjj DAYBREAK By Edwin Lanham Publishers New York City Co and Green Longmans Amon Hall had come to Texas in ’73 had hung up his shingle and gone to work undeterred by the depression of that period lie had prospered in his practice helped build the Texas railroad went into the cattle business his Ilerefords ranging over wide acres He had become wealthy had been elected to the senate Now' at 83 he is still going regularly to his office But none of his offspring the old man complained had ever amounted to — anything— Mark' his son refusing to listen to his advice had poured his money into an oil well and struck salt water Olivia nearing 50 still lingered in the old home And here was Clay his grandson leading shiftless life a Never ' termination did to old in France playing at being a painter Amon realize that it was his domination direct-thci- r Jivcs-dha- t Good Talk of Literary Folk And Travels I Author Finds Fan East and America Faith in His Interpreted in Terms Of Human Relationship Land Anew his de- - - y Walter Karig Aj L i' A ' a' e " - ' ' : : ' ' - ' 4W He knew Galsworthy war-weari- Cunninghame Graham W H Hudson and others The anecdotes he tells of them are fresh and breezy without having any special cance peace-lovin- - signifi- For instance there Is the story of the friendship of Conrad and Galsworthy and of Its inception There truth says Curie in the myth drink to forget his disillusionment witji Montparnasse To get the isthatno Conrad (then an unknown first “taste of Paris" out of his mouth he goes to the south of France to mate on a vessel hound from Liv— and meets James is Hilda who trouble and running awayfrom paint whom Clay assists "The two fall in love but Clay hesitating to enter erpool to Wellington) showed -J’olly!’tp Galsworthy and entangling relationshipsHilda returns to Paris-- - When she writes she is going back to America Clay rushes to her and spending a brief that the latter encouraged him to the manuscript to the pub honeymoon in his studio they witness scenes of violence in the revo- send lisheitThtf’incident really happened disturbances after the incident in lutionary Seeking refuge it was a young: 'Frenchman by a cafe amidst the rioting on the Stayisky Place de la Concorde they find it an but name of Jacques who gave the the are to and called aid improvised hospital the surgeon looking Pole his introduction upon to the life of after the wounded and’later Clay’s own automobile is burned by letters — ce CTymg-Franfor he refuses to pay In the pursuit of adventure for ransom In these contacts something of the bitterness of the class which the author admits a great struggle is realized by Clay who sees that: weakness Mr Curie sought out “The lines are tightening all over the world — we can go back an unfrequented nook of the to America but we’ll see blood flow in the streets again — and many world South American countries Hilda we won’t be spectators next time" are his favorites however and we All of the experiences of these in France and these many appreciative Paris scenes of revolutionary struggleexpatriates are set forth deftly and vividly are treated ofto those parts A shootby Mr Lanham whose penetration reaches to the essentials of action descriptions the heart of Veneand mental attitudes He has Clay say to the reporter when on ar- ing expedition in — good rival— has arranged an exhibit of his paintings" “If zuelan— jungles provided— a—thrill-seekfor the we all drank a lot it was partly because of the basic rootlessness measure of adventure jaguars of a very ferocious that was inescapable no matter how pleasant the life Just to sit in nature almost turned the tables on a cafe by the hour and let time slip by was in itself a defiance of what we had gone to France to escape it was thumbing our nose at the the hunters and the party escaped thanking fortune for delivering frenzy of America” is perhaps Mr Lanham rather than Clay who adds that now them from the very game they had “most of us (these escapists) feel that we must find our place in hoped to track down is the Typically English chapter and give whatever we can to it If there is any cultural lack society on Mr Curie’s discovery of three it’s to to us and it not run of because it” Clay is American cities New York Chiup supply away a cago and apparently only bewildered by New York his exhibition is He finds Washington success and he talks of getting a job but it is Hilda who hardly actually them effervescent heady but gross- finds work Then as Hilda becomes ill their money is nearly gone The American peoand the job seems imperative there comes the letter from Texas ly materialistic ple while friendly and hospitable that come assume Clay hoipe and asking management of his grand- are too busy to savor life father’s ranch Perhaps the best and most senAnd Clay is delighted to return to Texas but back at the ranch sitive writing is found in the chapto Hilda s anger seems to fall again under the old man’s sway almost ter that describes W H Hudson in to forgetting his art Hilda sets her will against Amon’s but the role most congenial to him that has the clearer insight seeing things are not as they were withClay his of the ornithologist but in no orthgrandfather that the arrogant old pioneer’s day is over in a “world odox sense Hudson was passionwhere individual opDortunity was becoming ever more an ately interested in birds as any fcnaenronism” Finally we see the young Halls on their rapidly way back reader of “Green Mansions” will to New York Clay free at last from his Maecenas with no bond linkwell remember He could not bear ing him to the past These two represent the new America but Mr to see them caged and he was not s Lanham meaning is hardly clear in Hilda’s saying: “I’m going to interested in classifying them in the work now with the only class that offers us any hope for the future" coldly scientific manner He was Is there no hope in the west? willing to sit for hours concealed in shrubbery until chance enabled him to observe the bird In its own purOil Flows in suits writing down carefully the deMADNESS IN THE HEART By Edward Donahoe Publishers Little tails of its habits As Mr Curie tells it one privileged to watch at Brown and Co Boston exOklahoma s oil industry from its infancy the rise of its oil nabobs Hudsons side enjoyed a unique perience and the growth of its crude pioneer towns to money-ma- d cities— all The style of “Caravansary and this is described in Edward Donahoe’s anecdotal narrative filled with Conversation” has a peculiar pelcharacters whom almost any Oklahoman could recognize This young lucid qualitjf that’ 'recalls a more author born in Ponca City Okla though leaving it in early life has leisurely age of writing a sort of built his book one may imagine out of his own youthful impressions Lambesque serenity and at times a and of episodes that others have related disconfor the accounting whimsicality that somehow isreml-niscenected character of the story of the gentle Elia Pleasant Prairie is the name Mr Donahoe gives to his oil town of which that “terrible and wicked old man” Timothv Wilson had Ring Supplies Title been one of the first citizens of power coming to the new town A worn for ten after the of Cherokee the xing shortly opening Strip and accumulating years gavethat he hasWillson author weaith even before the town became Anthony He was ruthless selfish arrogant of iolent temper and most of the town feared him of the new romance "Cat’s Eye” Only the gregarious bediamonded Mrs Regan unscrupulous gossip the idea for this first book Anthony and most of the town’s picaresque citizens found him Willson is the pseudonym chosen by to her taste Harold Will candlemaker golf World war veteran of In Pfrt the story is of Timothy Wilson and his long quarrel with champion and his family begun when his favorite daughter Lottie willful Syracuse N Y and his cat’s eye beauty with a temper matching his own married against his wishes Back ring is a choice specimen The book in Kansas before the Wilsons removed to Oklahoma Father Briscoe is a Barrows Mussey publication of had pronounced a curse upon Timothy his children and his children’s the moment children Whether as fulfillment of this dreadful curse or only the J5oes Jo-Chi- na consequence ofTimothy’s own uncontrolled disposition ihe — was left-alon- e in hiiTgreat house his declining years to spread Lionel Wiggam who’ is the auduring the town with scandalous placards publicly shaming his wife and thor of "Landscape With Figures" daughters (Viking) and a writer whose lyrics the story is that of Carl Philbin the old man’s have won him & high place among Partly grandson or and son the gentle John Philbin most worthy of the many of the younger American poets is now Pleasant Prairie citizens Mr Doriahoe portrays and to whom his in Peiping China devoting himself son was a sad disappointment Upon Carl it seems the curse of the to the writing of his first novel family must have fallen In childhood Carl was a good deal of a sneak and a liar At 13 he was sent to a Jesuit school in Kansas City which he left according to Mr Donahoe “a thoroughly ruined young man no aim m life and a morbid outlook with From five years of Kansas-Cit- y Carl went to Harvard and after Harvard spent his time largely dawdling over Europe provided with too much money and with incentive no for living " however is far less Interesting than the pictures A of Pleasant Prairie in its raw days of 1912 when — Otoe Indians still sat on the jsilent curbs and chewed gum through its development under the ambitions of Marcus Sigourney oil king who brought polo and fox hunting to the prairies where the buffalo had so lately roamed Mr Donahoe apparently ha& littleJove for Oklahoma -Graduation yet there are passages denoting his remembrance of its spring beauty For Weddings the grandeur of its wild landscape He entertains us with his know! of Oklahoma soNew Cemar Pottery 25c up edgeable canvas ciety yet we are never brought to Chase Giftware — close acquaintance with any one of his peopl- e- “Madness in the Heart" Bookends in new designs holds more than a suggestion how'—Leather goods — ever of promise and one will look Cases Toilet Billfolds Zipper for Mr Donahoe to furnish us some ' Sets day a deeper novel of his oil town Electric Clocks Pen and Pencil ensembles t '1 Y Critic of Society whose newest novel Richard Aldington a I sharp commentary on modern ery Heaven” is ociety er It Where Oklahoma nt “oil-struc- old-ma- n f' gailv-blanket- GIFTS —-For — Wood Illustrations gggfrBOOKS are' memorable gifts for all occasions - DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 East South Temple ’“As Its May hook for Its members an edition of Sinclair Lewis’ “Main Street” illustrated by Grant Wood was selected by the Limited Editions club This combination of Lew(s and Wood was suggested by Limited a nonmember and row-thEditions ciub is asking for other suggestions of - famous American books to he illustrated by famous American artists HEAVEN By Rfchawi Aldington Publishers Doubleday Doran and Co Inc Garden City' N Y “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive But to be young was very heaven” So the poet Wordsworth spoke But in this day to Richard Aldington to be young is not to find all' life heavenly Rather the in finding their young today are most often encountering difficulty world- - in making-placesfc- jr bewildered way themselves in the crumbling economic system Their “very heaven” is of struggle and confusion and failure Mr Aldington who has during the years since the war been a close observer of the social scene dealing in his several novels with various of its changing aspects' considers in his present book the problems faced by the new generation born in the war period It is no light romance that he has written by R S hut a deeply earnest provocative GRAND TOUR Edited E P Dutton Publishers Lambert social of pocertain presentation and Co Inc New York City litical and economic phases of the As unlike the usual type of travel modern world and a fiery outspoken critique of human perversi- book as some ofthe old prints it ties irresolution ignorance prejuare unlike those of the He finds so- reproduces dices and pretenses is this volume on the modernists sin“a from ciety slowly emerging which has bein' pre“Grand Tour” gularly stupid bourgeois regime" but still a society “so infinitely pared by R S Lambert and his careful of Its paper wealth and couriers” Here so infinitely careless of Its living squad of "literary we have the experience of proceedwealth of human beings" fol It is through the experiences and ing with them over the routetravEnglish frustrations of Chris Heylin going lowed by aristocraticbefore vul“the down from college because of the elers of the years of tourism” who did family's financial reverses that Mr garisation It was the fashion Aldington expresses his indignation the Continent with the stupidites and humbug of in the seventeenth and eighteenth the day often making Chris his 'centuries for Englishmen of wealth The youth goes home to send their sons on leaving the mouthpiece to find his father morally unable university on the “grand ’tour” to to meet the situation when his complete their education and to money is lost in foolish investments "temper their insularity” It was Queen Elizabeth who conhas taken to his bed consoling himas the finish self with whisky while his mother ceived the grand tour with more of pluck under maudlin of a young man’s education Someyoung men “of sentimentalities has her own jIaps times deserving were conceived of Conditioned in a whom good hopes for recovery emhousehold that held a “good match” their towardliness” for public the a panacea for any ill Nelly is marry- ployments were subsidized by uniqueen’s bounty others by their ing her pretty daughter Juliette versities Such were Fyneg Morison to an elderly baronet whose wealth Joseph Addison of gilds his faults and would inter- Philip Sidney much is told in these est her son in a rich young widow whose journeys Chris’ interest as a promising accounts The “Grand Tour” once a sym student in ethnological research English aristocratic culture has not equipped him for earning a bol ofkilled was by speed according to living His sweetheart Anne finds Mr Lambert— “as it was slowness him less attractive without the is time for leisurely travel that background of money he is seduced that made it what it once was” Can by the widow much his senior who one Imagine the young man in Ew for all Nelly’s plans wants love more than marriage and the busi- Vope today traveling “leisurely”? ness ends In a row with his par- Rather he "ships his automobile ents Through a former tutor Chris across channel and traverses France — secures apost as librarian to cata- in a cloud of dust In six daysin or as else flit's the same distance log the books and collections of many hours" a wealthy poseur who is half-ma- d Following the route laid down for The man’s pretensions drive this — modern young intellectual to a ruth- the perfect grand tourist the Dover less honesty that shortly brings road from London to the coast the his dismissal and the same brash- channel packet to Calais or Dieppe ness earns the enmity of his tu- driving on to Paris with Italy as of torial benefactor’ Only in his meet- goal over ’the Alpine passes Switzerland descending to Venice ing with Anne’s friend Martha does Chris find real satisfaction then Genoa Florence Pisa Naples shields and this the world would not have possibly Rome if “his tutor him from the seductions of Popery” found “respectable”1 Alps to view It seems there is no place In thU and recrossing the — hostile world for youth that re- Germanic city life each of the six covers a portion Dougljects the old formalities and fe- contributors tishes repressions and prejudices as- Woodruff does the first 3tage by Edmund of the past Yet at the end when the next is taken upAdiam Smith Chris is on the verge of destroying Blunden then Janet himself feeling himself "judged and Richard Pyke Sacheverell Sitwell condemned” he finds courage with- and Malcolm Letts each making in himself to attempt again the as- comparisons between yesterday’s tonishing adventure of living In “the and today’s experience It is Mona service of truth” though his part Wilson’s task to describe the rise and decline of the “Grand Tour” may be Insignificant t with quotation from the opinions of rrftny of the great of the day New Library Books Tht following books will bs added to the - Old prints maps and photographs public enhance the text of this delightful 8oi 1937: VERY fear-driven- — in-th- is Touring Past And Present ’ Alftnge — The Supreme Court and the National Will AveriU — Adolescence Baker ft Koutzahn — How to Interpret Social Work Carlson-How to Develop Personal Power Dark— -- London David — Finn Burnett Frontiersman De La Pasture — I Visit tbe Soviets Explorers' Club Tales Fanning— Rise of American Oil Free—Oardening Gibson— New Magician's Manual ' Olpaon — Look at Green —General Grant's Last Stand Advertisements Howard— How to Write Kearney— General Philip Keatny Lankes and Other— Making Prints Mauriac — Life of Jesus Peardon— Transition in English Historical Writing 1700-18:1PJllsbury— Picturing Miracles pt Plant and Animal Life Sears —City Man Slaughter — Amazing FredeHr St rachey— Theory and Practice of Socialism Wilkins— Pirate Treasure FICTION e Alhee— Young Robert Ayres— Follow a Shadow Edward DornKoa ns -t -- he-ri©ter6 GOOD NEIGHBOR By'fand an interpretation of today’s Publishers The events— and tomorrow’s — which the Bobbs-Merri- ll Co Indianapolis hewsptpers can’t supply “Itseems to me that an intelligent This is one of the jnost interesting of the International understanding books As! the and refreshing about drama west of Hawaii requires some come atic “problem" that has along of the Orient’s probin a long long time It is also of- appreciation lems so those of us who may con fered with complete candor and Jure to ourselves a Yellow Peril frankness— Karig forthrightly ad- will understand that the Far Eastis he in no expert mitting that ern nations have a more Orientalia including the political realistic White Perilgrimmer To this enc) set He out I have tried to be fair in and economic doesn’t opinion to indicate where others writing and A accurate in the facts about the Far East have missed the double motive prompted this enternor does he tell the president point To share a laboriously acand state department what they prise: education in Far Eastern reshould do to get on the right track quired and to explore the applilationships in establishing cordial relations cation to China and Japan of Preswith Asiatic peoples in restoring ident Franklin D Roosevelt's brave trade iHth them or in moving to challenge to a world g bring them into the fold of ‘the policy of the good neighbor’” nations He makes no preKarig is an artist in his own right tense whatever of writing a history His peculiarly lucid story map and of this part of the world His is not his sketches not only embelilsh the book on China Japan book but add just another to ready and war lords’ armies and “bandits” appreciation of materially text With this the Not everyone wants to go to book at hand to be read and then the Far East not everyone could go ready for reference the interif he wanted to Therte must be a kept ested reader of the news from the great many people though who Far East will gain a far clearer idea want to know what is going on over of Its It may be said that there what it is all about wluit it it is aimport book to study — but -- by—no may mean— inTparticularto this means js it' hard to studv ” There country Karig proves himself an lsn’t a dull line in it For those excellent vicar in tnis respect In who want to go deeper Into the subthe first place he is an excellent an excellent bibliography acject reporter from having been a long companies it ‘Adventure comedy time in the harness He knows the mystery tragedy and romance right questionsto ask Jthe right weavethroug h- h ed r am a ke-pepeople the right place to look for Can We Recover Good Will? what he wants to see and he has a vast curiosity about things that Karig leads -- thareader through matter Add to this that he writes the maze of foreign diplomacy with in an easy and 'most American interest in the foreground readable manner with a ’rare sense and with special application to the of humor and bluntness He seems Orient and our problems there The to be quite immune to insinuating subtitle of “Asia’s Good Neighbor” propaganda too Possibly you may is “We Were Once Can We Be gather that”- we like "Asia’s JJood Again?” Thus he recalls that for 90 years or more through a pioNeighbor- Really we do neer policy and a practice honorSupplies Background able kindly and sympathetic we “All that I have attempted In this won confidence and The book” Karig says in a brief intro- confidence of the friendship was Philippines duction “is the story- - in human to us without stint at the terms of American relationships given beginning of the Spanish-America- n with the Far East As an addition war In late years wavering counn to the vast library of sels fumbling diplomacy ignorance interpretations it is not a or Indifference of public opinion competitive critique but an intro- and a section of the American press duction to them all for this is not not above blatant propaganda have a book for experts and least of all done no little to destroy the islandLet it be ers’ is it a book by an expert good will toward us How can classified as a newspaperman's en- we recover lost ground? What can deavor to supply the background we really do about China? How should we think of Japan? Does war loom across the great waters? Can we keep the Pacific pacific? What is our duty to the Philippines? i Where does our interest lie? Karig answers these questions and many others He sees America Pierre Dreyfus son of tbat Cap- as the Orient's neighbor at the forks tain Alfred Dreyfus who was the of the road — one leading to the victim in one of the most infamous “Good Neighborhood” as Roosevelt conspiracies history has known has defines it in his statements of a told the whole story of this cause national' policy of peace through celebre in intimate detail in a vo- practical and profitable programs lume an excellent translation of of international cooperation for muwhich has just been published by tual helpfulness and good will and the Yale University Press under the other the military road leadthe title “The Dreyfus CsLse by the ing to the comity of a universal Man Alfred Dreyfus and His Sun graveyard As he views the rational course to be taken by the United Pierre Dreyfus” The translator and editor of this States Karig asks that we delibeaccount of the affair is Donald C rately put ourselves 'In the position McKay a former Utahn now of the of inability to attack anybody in department of history of Harvard commerce or war but of ability to university Mr McKay has also defend ourselves successfully from written the introduction to the ed- aggression in either This he reition recounting the factors which marks requires peculiar bravery- It gave extraordinary significance to is substituting challenge to ourthe case and the unusual points selves for challenge to the world of interest in this present volume but self restraint and respect for which includes material not hither- others he cogently observes are ever the first principles of a igood to published Mr McKay says however: “No neighbor anywhere Asia's Good Neighbor” is recomwork on the Dreyfus Affair has yet appeared mended as Important reading It nor can it be written until a good is in a style that does not exclude it deal of official material Is made from anyone’s list of books for sumavailable and a much deeper study mer reading It is anything but Is made of the period as a whole” heavy but it is never frivolous ASIA’S : )-r- good-nature- had destroyed his children’s enthusiasm energiesas and that Clay had sought in Europe escape from his domi- well as to find himself nance Clay Hall the central figure of Edwin Lanham’s novel is one of the many young Americans who in the ’twenties thought to find in Paris freedom from the stifling atmosphere of materialistic America Clav had been in France four years long enough to have become a well known figure to be recognized in the cafes welcomed by the bartender at his favorite bar toshare his studio with a poule to V By GEORGE SNELL CARAVANSARY AND CONVERSATION By Richard Curie Publisher Frederick A Stokes Co New York City In his travels and in the course of a lifetime spent on the fringes of London’s Grub street Richard Curie picked up a good deal of information Some of it furnished material for this book It is a light book met d low and reminiscences and impressions set down at whim a good book to dip Into and It heither Oout of at random-fo- r ffends nor genuinely absorbs you Curie knew most of the English men of letters at the turn of the century Conrad being his particular I T5T1 937 j Author of ‘The Wind Blows We$t'Continues Story of Texas Family With Contrast of French Scenes By E JUNE SUNDAY MORNING THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE '- Bates— Rainbow Fish Birins— Laurels Are Cut Down Carr — Burning Court Dowrey — Bugles Blow No More Forest — Rebels' Rendezvous Grey — West of the Plena Hunter— Three Die at Midnight book Novelty Planned For League Meet “Idea Exchange” will be the theme of the June meeting of the Salt Lake chapter of the League of Western Writers to be held at the Art Barn Monday at $ p m Each member present will be asked do talk for five minutes on his current work market tips and suggestions to others The guest speaker will be announced later The magazine exchange inaugurated during the winter- will be held again at this meeting Members are asked to bring magazines of interest as giving writing hints showing trends- or offering good - f markets to exchange with others i free-flowi- AMERICA: A REAPPRAISAL By Publishers Harold E Stearns Hillman-Cu- ri Inc - New York City In the complexities of modern existence we have been prone to view with alarm the sweeping effect of change Even the obviously necessary alterations in the habits of living to harmonize or cope with a not changing world have disturbed alone the conservative mind but the individual who has been reluctant to-lfixed Potions and Ideals Blip from his grasp Here is a book that should at least set the reader- to thinking Not that the reader may agree altoMr gether with the viewof Stearns but indeed1 ( he will be stimulated to ponder as to how far able tepene- n the author trate the mysteries of what might appear at the moment to be disastrous confusion on the part of America to readjust Itself or to change in conformity with what seems to be a trend thaAione can et - has-bee- It is asserted that “we are going from the known to the unknown from ihe actual to the probable and from the probable to the improbable in that and "not” the reverse order our intellectual temper is neither It is flexiskeptical nor dogmatic ble tentative and experimental We try less and less to promise more than we can reasonably- - performJI- As apparently logical as this “reappraisal” seems so the statement of Mr Stearns that “I know of no magic short-cu- t to wisdom" is strik"But I do ing in its simplicity know of a quick road to folly— the road of suppression of fear of new ideas of unwillingness to experiment of clinging to old formulas Asiatic-Amer-ica- Writers of Rocky Mountain West 4 Marjorie Hillis who wrote that' “Live Alone perennial and Like It” is shortly to appear with another volume concerned with the lone female's problems — it may be useful to the ftiale also How to be smart on a limited income Is the theme or that old question of “budgeting ”“the title being ''An Orchid on Your Budget: Or Live Smartly on What You Have” It's ll issue another best-sell- Almanac Frank Scully has completed fourth Fun in Bed book according to Simon and Schuster Thisis latest work for convalescents titled “Just What the Doctor Or- Stearns 25000-wo- in best-selle- rs a 250-co- tloif that's ells sra highprinted pries privately th -- in his ls“John Gielgud’s Hamlet:-- Recusually ord of Performance” the author berevol- ing Rosamund Gilder The Notes on Brown Scenery and Traditional Business publish the trade edition on June 3 are by Giegud himself - Miss Gilder a member of the staff of Theater On June 18 will be published a Arts Monthly gives the details of boOk that all who saw the Gary the Guthrie McCUntic production in Cooper hit "Mr Deeds- - Goes to theif entirety from Gielgud's perTown” will receive with hilarity formance to facsimiles of the pro“Everybody’s Pixillated” is the title grams covering Russell M Arundel’s examination of “doodles” or "the foolish Edna St Vincent Millay’s new volume of poems "Conversations at designs people make on paper while exthey’re thinking" as that tuba Midnight” is promised for Juqe There is pert Longfellow Deeds' declared publication by Harpers ofpixll-latiowere just as much evidence to be a special first edition in leathbook as his tuba playing The er and also a limited autographed Is from Little Brown edition The publishers say that the advance sale promises to break-thA work on "The Auroral Drama" high records of her previous books by Harold E O’Neill a Brunswick Kenneth Roberts’ new historical N J newspaper editor ia announced for June appearance by novel "Northwest Passage” is not comto be published until July 1 the reaBurney Brothers Publishing n e pany Aurora Mo It presents a" dramatic “biography of the aurora the publishers say and is probably the only book devoted entirely to this phenomenon son being that the club has selected it for July The limited edition of the book also will be delayed until June 25 DouJ bleday Doran announces th K : BOOKS "BREAD AND WINE" by Iqnagio 'Silone $250 "CORONATION COMMENTARY” by Geoffrey Dannis T $200 "PRESENT INDICATIVES” by Noel Coward $300 "THE SUPREME COURT AND NATIONAL WILL" $250 by Dean Alfbuge "THE WIND FROM THE MOUNTAINS"' by Trygoe Gulbransen Z C M Bool Shop— I $250 Street rd edw th since - Mr Hendrick note prologue to the volume “is regarded as one of the most Little utionary in history V Story Feature June issue of Story Magazine features a dered" and was finished almost si- just off the press "Noon Wine” by Kathmultaneously with the arrival of the erine story Anne Porter At the same Scullys’ third child The earlier books of the series have all been time the Porter story is appearing William Maxwell whose "They Came Like Swallows” was one of the two selections for May by the club has “the power to entertain” acpriceless “Bulwark of the Republic a Bio- cording to Zona Gale who says: “He graphy of the Constitution” which is In the literary world to stay beclu cause he cannot help It" "They is the June selection is a timely volume by Bur- Come Like Swallows” was a Harper ' ton Hendrick It is 150 years ago title this June that the Constitution was To head the Oxford fall book list presented to the states The period Bobbs-Merri- E and of accepting our environment our economic evils and? our social relationships docilely” In the latter the keynote of this book is struck it lifts the curtain and reveals why there is hope In the current unrest “We still prefer a disorderly plenty to an orderly further illustrates the scarcity’’ critical insight of “America— a Reappraisal” Another quotation from the author’s pen is comforting in that it provides an excuse for our tolerance of certain things “We know the dangers of tolerating fools” writes Mr Stearns “but the dangers of not tolerating them are much worpe” The author of "Street I Know’ has distinguished himself again in' “America — a Reappraisal” penning a vigorous tribute to the land in which he also reaffirms a passion- ate faith in American Ideals and his American democracy — N' C C critical-full-lengt- The Literary Harold Floor Hr |