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THE PILGRIMAGE OF MRS. DESTINN: Mary Mitchell's New Novel: a Thoughtful, Profound and Mature Piece of Writing

... MISS MARY MITCHELL'S new novel is a long, long step away from A Warning to Wantons; a step towards the sober, revealing light of the everyday. There is little room for gaiety in the theme the writer has chosen, and the emphasis is decisively on facts rather than fancies. Neverthe less, THE PILGRIMAGE OF MRS. DESTINN (Methuen. 9s. 6d.) is very far from being a dull book. It may not have the ...

Published: Saturday 24 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1300 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

Book Reviews

... Elizabeth ftewehs MOUNT IDA, by Monk Gibbon (Cape; 18s.), is a book far from easy to classify-- it is not quite autobiography, not quite novel. Mr. Gibbon has, indeed, forged a form of his own: and why should he not? He is an outstanding Anglo-Irish poet; he is the author of The Seals. Moreover, in Mount Ida he is making a new approach to an ancient subject-- the primary subject, possibly, ...

Published: Wednesday 14 July 1948
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 2174 | Page: Page 24, 32 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

Books

... Reviewed by Trevor Allen STRANGE are the winds of circum stance that blow into men's lives, launch ing them on unusual journ eys-- Captain Roy Farran went east in 1940 at nineteen, fought in tanks in the Western Desert and in Crete, operated as a Special Service commando behind the enemy lines in Italy and France, and finally served in the Palestine Police-- a job that involved him in a charge ...

Published: Thursday 01 July 1948
Newspaper: Britannia and Eve
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1305 | Page: Page 43, 70 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

Flowers for Teacher

... . By Margaret Archer. (Jarrolds 9s. 6d.) Poison and sentimentality. The rustics talk in indefatigably rustic dialect and there 's an Irishman who savs bad cess to him and a cup of tay. R. C.-C. ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 37 | Page: Page 23 | Tags: Review 

GENTLEMAN'S AGREEMENT

... A FILM that purports to clarify the case against anti-Semitism within the space of two hours is an audacious thing; a film that selects this special moment for doing so is even more audacious. It is obvious to any decent man or woman that persecution of any kind is both evil and stupid, but the particular bias of many people at many times against the Jews is a pheno menon that springs from ...

Published: Wednesday 07 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 737 | Page: Page 18 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

TRAVELLER'S JOY

... YOU shall not know by what strange accident I chancèd on this letter, says Portia, at the end of The Merchant of Venice, when Shakespeare is bluffing shamelessly in order to get the play ended. Similarly, you need not know by what strange accident I was obliged to see most of Traveller's Joy on my feet, standing at the back of the Criterion stalls. I had not stood through a play since ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 785 | Page: Page 11 | Tags: Cartoons  Review 

Defeat in Victory

... . By Jan Ciechanowski. (Gollancz 18s.) Yet another account of the betrayal of Poland. The author writes with clarity and authority. He was Polish Ambassador in the United States until his Government ceased to be recognised. it- ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 39 | Page: Page 23 | Tags: Review 

Murder by Multiplication

... . By Mary Durham. (Skeffington 9s. 6d.) Conventional crime but quite an ingenious solution ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 16 | Page: Page 23 | Tags: Review 

THE PLANTAGENETS: A New Estimate of a Dark Era in Our History

... THE PLANTAGENETS A New Estimate of a Dark Era in Our History What manner of men were the Plantagenets? No other dynasty has reigned so long over England since the Norman Conquest, and yet somehow they remain shadowy figures, those Kings who wore the sprig of broom, descen dants of Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, and the Empress Maud, or else, where Shakespeare turned the floodlights upon them, we ...

Published: Saturday 17 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 881 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Review 

TRAVELS WITH A PANTHER: Victory Canning's Panther's Moon, a New Book by the Author of Carl and Anna; and Other ..

... THERE are some good novels this week and, though none of them is necessarily of great significance, they make a satisfying and notable list. First of all, A QUIET NEIGH BOURHOOD (Heinemann. 8s. 6d.), a book of considerable character in spite of its gently restricted theme. Mrs. Anne Goodwin Winslow writes, if I may use an old-fashioned term, like a lady, with restraint, delicacy and a polite ...

Published: Saturday 03 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1765 | Page: Page 30 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

OUR BOOKSHELF: OUR REVIEWER'S CHOICE; MEN AT HIGH TABLE and THE HOUSE OF STRANGERS; JOY AND JOSEPHINE; KNOCK ON ..

... OUR BOOKSHELF Rupert Croft-Cooke OUR REVIEWER'S CHOICE MEN AT HIGH TABLE and THE HOUSE OF STRANGERS. By Gerald Bullett. (Dent 9s.) JOY AND JOSEPHINE. By Monica Dickens. Michael Joseph 10s. 6 d.) KNOCK ON ANY DOOR. By Willard Motley. Collins 10s. 6d.) GOING MY WAY. By Godfrey Winn. I Hutchinson 12s. 6d.) MEN AT HIGH TABLE and THE HOUSE OF STRANGERS. Mr. Gerald Bullett has the faculty of in ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1478 | Page: Page 12 | Tags: Photographs  Review 

OLIVER TWIST

... CINEGUILD'S Oliver Twist is such an excellent piece of technical work, so responsibly and affectionately made, and so certain to add lustre to the British film industry, that it seems ungrateful to suggest that it may not be wholly successful as an entertainment. And yet a critic can only speak as he finds, and whereas I came away from Cineguild's first Dickens film, Great Expectations, ...

Published: Wednesday 21 July 1948
Newspaper: The Sketch
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 622 | Page: Page 18 | Tags: Photographs  Review