A Permanent Library Book
The Short Stories of Dostoevsky----.
With an introduction by
WILLIAM PHILLIPS
When THE SHORT NOVELS OF DOSTOEVSKY was published in
the Permanent Library last November, it was acclaimed by critics as the
most important anthology of the year. Now, in this new volume, the short
stories of the great Russian master of fiction have been collected for the
first time.
Mr. Prohartchin
THE SEVENTEEN SHORT STORIES
White Nights
A Little Hero
A Novel in Nine Letters
The Landlady
Polzunkov
An Unpleasant Predicament
The Crocodile
A Faint Heart
Bobok
Another Man's Wife
The Peasant Marey
An Honest Thief
The Heavenly Christmas Tree
A Christmas Tree
&
A Wedding
A Gentle Spirit
The Dream of a Ridiculous Man
$4.00
A
LiHie
Yes and a
Big
No-----.,
The Autobiof!rabhv of
GEORGE GROSZ
In these memoirs, George Grosz, one of the great figures of contem–
porary art, has told the story of his life in human as well as in artistic
terms. Born in a German town, the son of an innkeeper, Grosz tells of his
boyhood, his first attempt at drawing and his days in a German art school.
With him we meet the early and now forgotten academic painters, the
disciples of Dadaism, the Pascins and Modiglianis, the Bohemians of the
Latin Quarter, and the
countle~s
personalities in education, art, literature
and business of America and Europe. He has also included a full account
of his experiences in the United States.
The book is profusely illustrated. There are
and 151 drawings in line and half-tone covering
the last quarter-century as George Grosz saw it.
At all bookstores
five pages in full color
the entire· panorama of
$7.50
THE DIAL PRESS, NEW YORK