Vol. 18 No. 3 1951 - page 258

A
THE
DIVIDING OF TIME
"Written beautifully and mys·
teriously, promises to be a matter
of violent discussion in literary
circles .. . The wit and beauty of
some of the passages are indescrib·
able ...
A
literary achievement of
distinction."
- Harper's
A
THE
DIVIDING OF TIME
"There can be no doubt that it reo
veals great talent, perhaps the first
major literary talent since Mr.
Saroyan erupted with 'The Daring
Young Man' , . . To review this
book adequately one would have
to be part priest, part lover and
part psychoanalyst."-BASIL
"WOON,
San FranriJ(o Ntws?f'
_
One of the most unusual
journeys in all fiction.
Ifl
all bod·
stll"s, 12.75.
DOU8UDAY
CONTRI BUTORS
ERICH AUERBACH, who teaches
in the School of Graduate Studies
at Yale University, is the author of
"Mimesis," a study of the rise of
realism in the literature of the
Western world.
ROBERT WARSHOW is the man·
aging editor of Commentary.
ALBERT COOK, author of "The
Dark Voyage and the Golden
Mean, " lives in Boston.
SANDRA WOOL teaches at Bryn
Mawr. This is her first appearance
in
PRo
EMMA SWAN's first book of
poems, "The Lady and the Lion, "
was recently published by New
Directions.
WILLIAM S. POSTER has published
articles and reviews in Comment–
ary, The Nation, and other periodi–
cals.
ANDREWS WANNING lives in
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
ARTHUR MIZENER, author of "The
Far Side of Paradise," teaches at
Carleton College.
The Fourth Writers' Conference
University of Utah, June 18-29
Leaders: Karl Shapiro, Jessamyn West,
Oliver La Farge, Ray B. West, Jr., Leslie
A. Fiedler, George R. Stewart.
For particulars, address:
BREWSTER GHISELlN, DirectOf",
U. of Utah, Salt Lake City
255,256,257 259,260,261,262,263,264,265,266,267,268,...370
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