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China and Czecho-Slovakia

... -- I DO not know a better book than Joy Homer's Dawn Watch in China (Collins, 12s. 6d.). Here was a girl who spent fourteen months not only touring the Chinese provinces, but also the Japanese areas. She travelled over all except three of the provinces, covered 1,200 miles on a truck, lived in caves, was in numerous air raids, visited the front line trenches, met generals and coolies alike, ...

Published: Monday 01 December 1941
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 277 | Page: Page 32 | Tags: Review 

Books

... : Reviewed by Noel Thompson TWO books this month have their setting for the most part on board ship. The first is Life Boat by Signe Toksvig (Faber and Faber, 7s. 6d.), and a very unusual book this is. The plot is that of the American wife of a German husband on their way back to Germany. The husband's former governess is on board, now a missionary, and terribly wounded about the face by the ...

CINEMA CAMEOS

... . By C. A. LEJEUNE. WHEN a director makes one good film, it may be luck. When he makes two, it's a pleasant surprise. When he makes three, he has got to be watched. When he makes four, it 's getting serious. When he makes five, you can begin to think about calling him a great director. By this arithmetic, TOM, DICK AND HARRY (London Pavilion and Marble Arch Pavilion) makes a great director out ...

THE LITERARY LOUNGER

... . By L. P. HARTLEY. THE problem of evil is one that always interested Sir Hugh Walpole and provided the subject of many of his novels. To him, evil was not a mere abstraction, it was a force that entered into human beings and possessed them. I do not remember if the Devil makes a personal appearance in any of his books, but there are plenty of characters so like him as to be almost ...

Published: Wednesday 03 December 1941
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2236 | Page: Page 20, 21 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: Ducks and Drakes (Apollo)

... By Herbert Farjeon Ducks and Drakes Apollo AFTER the success of Spring Meeting-- which though I did not see it, I under stand from well-informed sources to have been an excellent piece of work--Ducks and Drakes, by the same author, comes as a disappointment. To describe it as more than just another unpretentious little comedy would be to give it more than its due. To detect in it any ...

Published: Wednesday 03 December 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 795 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: Love in a Mist (St. Martin's)

... By Herbert Farjeon Love in a Mist (St. Martin' s) ON the programme there is Exmoor, and on Exmoor there is fog. Hence the title of Mr. Kenneth Home's new comedy. And hence, when the honeymoon car containing Pat and Nigel, married that very morning, can no longer see its bonnet before its wind-screen, the bed-and-breakfast bungalow of Mr. and Mrs. Evans appears to offer most timely refuge. Mrs. ...

Published: Wednesday 10 December 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 770 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

CINEMA CAMEOS

... . By C. A. LEJEUNE. SERGEANT YORK (War ners) would appear, at first sight, to be the sort of war- film that is generally made several years after the end of a war. In its restraint, its sincerity, and its care ful avoidance of hys teria and jingoism it belongs to the class of The Big Parade, Journey's End, and All Quiet on the Western Front, rather than to the vituperative melodramas of ...

Published: Wednesday 17 December 1941
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2458 | Page: Page 10, 11 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

THE LITERARY LOUNGER

... . By L. P. HARTLEY. DURING his literary career Mr. Osbert Sit- well has opened doors leading into many countries, many subjects, many lives. There is nothing deliberate or experimental about his versa tility. Poet, satirist, critic, traveller, as well as novelist, he writes to satisfy his curi osity about life, and this curiosity is continually taking fresh forms for its expression. Like Alice ...

Published: Wednesday 17 December 1941
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2407 | Page: Page 20, 22 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: The Man Who Came to Dinner (Savoy)

... By Herbert Far j eon The Mail Who Came to Dinner (Savoy) ON its first night at the Savoy this American success was a roar both on the stage and off. The roaring off the stage was done by the audience, which delighted in the sophisticated, flish-flash sallies provided by those ingenious and indefatigable authors, George Kaufman and Moss Hart. The roaring on the stage was done by that admirable ...

Published: Wednesday 17 December 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 764 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Cartoons  Review 

FROM THE CHEF'S SCRAP-BOOK: A WARTIME MENU

... FROM THE CHEFS SCRAP-BOOK: A WARTIME MENU. Jyt OTAGE DE TOMATES A L'AIL. Br 7) 1 lb. tomatoes. 2 oz. rice. 2 medium-sized onions. r 4 pints of stock. 1 carrot. Salt. 1 dessertspoonful of margarine. Sugar. Garlic. Lightly fry the chopped onions, break the tomatoes in half and put them in a saucepan with the onions. Leave to simmer on a very slow fire until soft. Add the stock either water in ...

Published: Wednesday 17 December 1941
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 479 | Page: Page 6 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

The Theatre: The Morning Star (Globe)

... TU By Herbert Far j eon The Morning Star (Globe) HERE would seem to be the first serious play on the present war produced in the West End of London. The pribbles and prabbles of coupon comedy give place at last to the anguish of hope, the routine of heroism. Death hovers ominously; little principals peep between his legs for self- respect and existence; the siren wails, the thunderbolts ...

Published: Wednesday 24 December 1941
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 809 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Illustrations  Review 

REALITY AND REMINISCENCES

... Reality and Reminiscences --By Vernon Fane Charles Graves goes Awfully British Bernard Darwin s Memories Mrs. Belloc Lowndes Looks Back on Childhood Frank S. Smythe, the Happy Mountaineer ONE of the first bits of literary gossip I heard when I got back to London was that LIFE LINE, by Charles Graves (Heinemann. 8s. 6d.), had sold out its first edition in a few days after publication. I had ...

Published: Saturday 27 December 1941
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1774 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review