Vol.12 No.4 1945 - page 432

The definitive
work
of a fine
writer
TRIAL
BALANCE
Her art as a novelist
INDIAN
pauL
WILLIAM MARCH'S
distinguished
···short stories have appeared in maga–
zines throughout this country and in
~ritain
for nearly two decades. Now, in
Trial Balance,
Mr.
March has selected
55 of his stories covering the years from
1928
to
1944.
Here are stories from
The Little Wife, Come In At The Door,
and
Some Like Tbem Sbort-and
many
which have never appeared
in
book
form. Several new stories are published
here for
th~
first time.
$3.50
By JOAN BENNET:r.
Everyone who
enjoys die novels of Virginia Woolf
will delight in Mrs. Bonnett's keen
analysis, her discernment of develop–
ment, her piecing together of the vision
of
life unique to Virginia Woolf. The
method adopted, of generous and full–
length quotation, makes-" it easy to fol–
low without interruption for reference
elsewhere. Mrs. Bennett regards her
task as that of an
interprete~;..she
leaves .
the judgment to Virginia Woolf"s read–
·ers and
he:r o"wn.
$2.00
JO.HN MOORE,
a
recent Avery
Hopwood Award winner, has written
an extraordinary first novel. To his
initial theme of the effect of prejudice
and violence upon a small town, he has
brought a bitter logic, and shown the
shocking impact of an attempted
lynching upon a group of young boys.
Indian
Paul"introduces an author who
immediawly demonstrates
his
impor–
tance.
$2.00
431 433,434,435,436,437,438,439,440,441,442,...562
Powered by FlippingBook