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The Destroyer of Worlds A Return To Lovecraft Country 1st Edition Matt Ruff Full Chapter
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Self-control; Self-control and business power; Business success; Will
in idealism; with a Review of chapters at the close.
19–19246
(Eng ed 19–19271)
“The pictures are good, and his story, told in a very conversational
and natural way, is especially instructive.” J. S. B.
20–16292
Reviewed by H: L. West
“His ingenious mingling of the records of his own life and mental
progress and achievement with accounts of his contact with other
men and women of his time, give to Mr Mallock’s memoirs a rare
quality. Its pages are all filled with an exceptional sympathy for the
mental attitude of even those from whom he differed on problems of
vital and lasting importance.” E. F. E.
Reviewed by R. M. Lovett
“What the author has given us in his books, with all sincerity, has
been, so it seems, not ‘confessions’ by any means, but his real inner
thought without compromise or unexpressed reservations. This,
rather than its suavity of style, its variety of interests, its numerous
personalities, explains the charm of the volume. There is an air of
intellectual and moral success and good-breeding about it such as
one rarely finds.”
Reviewed by E. L. Pearson
“Mr Mallock in the lucidity of his style, in his confident logic and
graceful sense of proportion, in his fastidiousness and his cynical
undertones, betrays the mind of the eighteenth-century aristocrat.”
20–5655
As the basis for an opinion as to the possibilities of peace
negotiations with Soviet Russia, the author undertook an
examination of the political, social and military conditions there at
first hand, by a personal visit. The book records his findings in diary
form interspersed with interviews, conversations and personal
reflections. Throughout, the author draws a comparison with the
French revolution and concludes that the only way to head off a
military dictatorship in Russia is through one of two policies; the
unthinkable one of making war on her on a grand scale, or “to make
every effort to give the Soviet republic internal and external peace,
and to establish commercial bonds with them, to the great blessing of
mankind and to the prosperity of all countries.” Contents:
Introductory; To Petrograd; Moscow; Social reconstruction; Trotsky
and the red army; Industry; Religion and women; The peace terms;
Homeward bound; Conclusions; Appendix—Prinkipo and Nansen.
20–4462
Reviewed by R. M. Underhill
“The author not only knows her country, but those who live in it,
and she describes both with strong feeling and yet with artistic
restraint.”
“The theme of this book is good but it is not good enough for 430
pages of closely printed matter. Of the characters that create ‘The
story of a New Zealand river,’ which, by the way, is an extremely bad
title, nothing but praise may be given.” H. S. G.
20–4129
These three plays: All clear; God of my faith; and God’s outcast,
“written during the horrors of the unjust and cruel war forced by
Germany upon civilisation ... founded on actual incidents, may serve
to keep alive remembrance of some of the barbarous outrages
perpetrated by the Hun on innocent and wretched peoples.”
(Foreword) They are songs of hate and the Germans, in the author’s
opinion, are “a race apart, unfit to associate with and to be shunned
forevermore.”
20–17410
“As a novel written to divert and mystify, ‘In the house of another’
succeeds in its purpose.”
20–21432
20–4546
20–4891
“The story is well told in language borrowed for the most part from
the Old Testament, and the manners and customs of the Jewish
people are well described.”
20–8510
19–15994
“What Miss March has done is well done—her chapters are poorly
named, however. The American edition would be improved if
statistics from American institutions and organizations were added.”
E. M. Achilles
[2]
MARCHANT, JAMES, ed. Control of
parenthood. *$2.50 (5½c) Putnam 176
20–21358