Rhetoric 1 and 2 : manual and calendar for .. - CORE

76

Transcript of Rhetoric 1 and 2 : manual and calendar for .. - CORE

LI B RARYOF THE

U N I VER.SITYor ILLINOIS

808

Digitized by the Internet Archive

in 2011 with funding from

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

http://www.archive.org/details/rhetoric12manual4445univ

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS

Rhetoric 1 and 2

Manual and Calendar

FOR

1944.1945

Published by

CHARLES W. ROBERTSUrbana, Illinois

1944

Rhetoric 1 Section Room.

Instructor

Office

OflSce Hours

Rhetoric 2 Section Room.

Instructor

Office

Office Hours

t-^u

Rhetoric 1 and 2

1944-1945

You are expected at the beginning of the course to make yourselfthoroughly familiar with all items in this manual—preceding thecalendar—and will be held responsible for the observation of all

directions and regulations here given.

Objectives

Rhetoric 1 and 2 are designed to help you develop, for use in

college and afterward, the ability (a) to understand and evaluatewhat you hear and read, and (b) to speak and write intelligibly,

effectively, and convincingly.

Directions for Preparing Manuscript

Write on theme paper, one side only, with ink, and get clearly

legible results.

If themes are typed, unruled white paper, 8^ x 11, of mediumweight should be used, and lines should be double-spaced; thin or

flimsy paper will not be accepted.

Write the title of each theme at the top of the first page beginning

on the first ruled line, and capitalize the first letter of each important

word. Leave a space equivalent to one blank line between the title

and the beginning of the theme.

Leave a margin of about one and one-half inches at the left side

of each page. Do not crowd the right side of the page.

Indent the first line of each paragraph about an inch.

Number the pages of every theme over two pages in length.

Draw a horizontal line through words to be disregarded by the

reader; do not enclose them in brackets or parentheses.

Fold themes once, lengthwise to the right, and endorse them on the

lines provided for that purpose.

Each endorsement must give, in the following order:

1. Name of course, number of section, and name of instructor;

2. name of student (last name first) ; 3. date on which theme is

written; 4. theme number in Arabic numerals; 5. title of theme.

The correct form is given below:

Rhetoric 1, Al—Mr. Jones

Smith, John

October 30, 19+4

Theme 1

Why I Came to College

3

Directions for Handling Themes

Late themes will not be accepted by the instructor except by special

arrangement. Unless 30U are ill, this arrangement should prefer-

ably be made in advance. Delayed themes may not be made up at

the rate of more than tivo a zveek, and ivill not be accepted ivithin

the last two weeks prior to the last class meeting.

No one who is delinquent in the written work of the semester ivill

be given credit in the course.

Themes are to be revised in red ink and returned to the instructor

at the next meeting of the class after they are received. You shouldmark the date of revision below the grade or comment on the back of

the theme.

Themes should not be rewritten unless the instructor so directs.

When a theme is rewritten, the new copy should be endorsed like

the original as to number and date, should be marked in red ink

"Rewritten" just below the endorsement, and both the original andthe rewritten copies, folded separately, should be returned to the in-

structor.

Credit is not given for themes until they are returned in revised

or rewritten form for filing.

You should make copies of papers you wish to preserve, as themesare kept on file until the close of the year and are then destroyed.

Honesty in Written Work

Your endorsement on a theme is considered a pledge that it is anhonest specimen of your writing proficiency. If you submit papers

which are not genuine evidence of your own abilitj', you are thwartingyour instructor's efforts to diagnose your writing ailments and to cure

them. You are, furthermore, exposing yourself to disciplinary action

for cheating, plagiarism, and falsification of records. Bear in mindthat your object in this course is to achieve proficiency through constant

practice and through the development of your ability to criticize yourown work. Your instructor considers Nour impromptu themes andyour composition on the final examination the best evidence of yoursuccess in achieving proficiency in writing even under stress.

1. Do not literally repeat, without acknowledgment, phrases, sen-

tences, or larger units of discourse from another writer or fromyour own previous compositions.

2. Do not use another's main headings or general plan, or anexpansion or a synopsis of another's work unless specifically

advised to do so by your instructor.

3. Do not permit your work to be copied in whole or in part byanother student.

4. Do not allow anyone other than your instructor to correct or

revise your papers at any stage in their composition.

A literary debt may be acknowledged by incidental reference to

the source, either (a) by means of a phrase in the text, or (b) by use

of a footnote.

Value of Grades

As nearly as possible, a fixed standard of grades is maintainedthroughout each semester. Thus a theme written in September is heldto the same requirements as a theme written in January. Studentswho acquaint themselves with the objectives of the course and whostrive to attain them are likely to experience a definite improvementin their grades as the semester advances. The standard is higher inthe second semester than in the first. In general, Rhetoric 2 is as muchbeyond the Rhetoric 1 level as Rhetoric 1 is beyond the high schoollevel, with a corresponding change in the value of grades.

Theme grades range from A to E. Plus and minus signs attachedto grades are often temporarily helpful, but signify nothing in thefinal record. You should ask your instructor to explain grades andcomments not clearly understood.

A: A theme is graded A if it is of exceptional merit in form andcontent. Excellence of any kind—freshness of treatment, interest,

originality in thought—will be given due recognition, but it must,

in this course, be accompanied by accuracy and soundness in detail

of structure. The instructor is quite as anxious to read interesting

or brilliant themes as 30U are to write them.

B: A theme definitely better than the average in form and content,

but not of the highest excellence, is graded B. The grade indi-

cates that the instructor is very favorably impressed.

C: C is the average grade. A theme graded C is mechanically accur-

ate, offers some variety of sentence construction and effectiveness

of diction, is satisfactorily paragraphed, is satisfactorily organized

as a whole, and is at least fair in content.

D: D indicates the lowest quality of work for which credit is given.

It is an unsatisfactory grade and often indicates a grave doubtin the mind of the instructor. It is therefore a danger sign.

E: A grade of E means work too inferior for credit. Errors to be

specially guarded against are listed below. You are cautioned

against repeating errors in successive themes.

Faults in the details of writing

:

Misspelled wordsIncomplete sentences

Commas between sentences

Sentences with violent changes in construction

Straggling sentences

Unclear or illogical sentences or diction

Bad errors in grammar

Faults in form and content:

Carelessness in the preparation of manuscript

A marked failure to paragraph properly

Straying from the subject

A marked lack of coherenceInadequacy of content

Spelling Test

Your proficiency in spelling will be determined by your themesand, in addition, by a special spelling test (or tests) based on the

section on spelling in the rhetoric text. In this test you are expected to

make a grade of at least ninety per cent. This statement does not

mean that if you make a grade, let us say, of eighty-eight per cent,

you will fail in the course. In general, however, illiterate spelling is

regarded as a sufficient cause for failure. A low grade in the test andpoor spelling in themes are therefore to be guarded against.

Vocabulary Building

An adequate and effective vocabularv is an invaluable aid in oral

and written expression. You should seek to enlarge your present

vocabulary by making particular note of the new words 3'ou encounter,

looking up definitions, learning spellings and making words really

your own by employing them correctly in your speech and writing. Toencourage vocabulary building habits, rhetoric instructors expect stu-

dents to be able to spell and define all words used in course

assignments.

Conferences

Instructors are available for consultation whenever jou needadvice regarding your rhetoric work. Occasionally instructors call

students in for conference. Such conference appointments are a regular

part of the course, and absence from them is regarded as a serious

delinquency.

Proficiency Examinations

At the beginning of semesters, proficiency examinations in FreshmanRhetoric will be offered by the English Department. Students who fail

the Rhetoric 1 proficiency examination will be denied admission to

Rhetoric 1 and may prepare to pass the test at a later date by (1)

enrolling in Rhetoric 0, a one-semester, non-credit remedial course,

(2) b}' tutoring, or (3) by independent study and practice in writing.

Students who do exceptionally' well on the proficiency examinationwill be granted exemption from Rhetoric 1 with three hours of credit.

Likewise, students will be released from Rhetoric 2 with three hours

of credit b\' passing a Rhetoric 2 examination. Students who prepare

for these examinations should note that the proficiency examinationsin Rhetoric 1 and 2 will be equivalent to those given at the end of

the semester in the respective courses. According to a University

ruling, a proficiency examination may not be taken to remove a failure

in a course.

Final Examinations and Semester Grades

Final examinations in Rhetoric 1 and 2 are primarily tests of

proficiency in English. Your instructor expects your final examina-tion paper to demonstrate conclusively that you can, and will hence-

forth, write correctly and effectively even under pressure. In deciding

on your semester grade, your instructor does not average your themegrades and indulge in mathematical calculations involving themes,

talks, recitations, tests, etc. On the basis of all such evidence, he

RHETORIC 1 CALENDAR

All assignments here made are subject to change by individualinstructors. You are advised to give careful attention to and makewritten note of assignment instructions given in the classroom.

UEC—Unified English Composition

RFC—Readings for Composition

Rhetoric 1 First Week

Oct. 11 : Announcement of texts and assignments. You will be

(Feb. 14) : asked to speak informally for one minute on a subject

suggested by your instructor.

Oct. 13 : Be prepared to discuss Manual pp. 1-5 and UEC pp. 1-5,

(Feb. 16): 9-11, and 130-132. Bring UEC, Manual, and RFC to

class for this discussion.

11

Rhetoric 1 Second Week

Oct. 16 : Be prepared to discuss "Reading" UEC pp. 11-32 and(Feb. 19): such problems (pp. 32-49) as are assigned by your

instructor.

Oct. 18 : "Grammar: Preview" UEC pp. 50-56 and "The Sen-

(Feb. 21): tence" UEC pp. 190-202.

Oct. 20 : "Fragmentary and Run-together Sentences" UEC pp. 202-

(Feb. 23): 207 and "Agreement and Arrangement of Sentence Ele-

ments" UEC pp. ^07-213.

12

Rhetoric 1 Third Week

Oct. 23 : "Punctuation" UEC pp. 251-259.

(Feb. 26):

Oct. 25 : "The Whole Composition: Preliminary Considerations"

(Feb. 28): UEC pp. 331-338. Be prepared also to discuss selections

in the Green Caldron, as assigned by your instructor.

Oct. 27 : "Description" UEC pp. 628-645, and continued discussion

(Mar. 2) : of the Green Caldron.

13

Rhetoric 1 Fourth Week

Oct. 30 : Theme 1, impromptu. Bring theme paper to class for this

(Mar. 5): composition.

Nov. 1 : "The Thesaurus," UEC pp. 132-142 and "Levels of

(Mar. 7): Usage" UEC pp. 146-157.

Nov. 3 : "Economv of Diction" UEC pp. 156-164 and "Specific

(Mar. 9): Words" UEC pp. 164-166. Read also "The Hallmarksof American" RFC pp. 215-223.

14

Rhetoric 1 Fifth Week

Nov. 6 : "The Imaginative Use of Diction" UEC pp. 167-174.

(Mar. 12): Read also selections in UEC pp. 181-189 or RFC pp. 247-

284, as assigned by )'our instructor.

Nov. 8 : Read descriptive selections in RFC pp. 284-295, as

(Mar. 14): assigned by your instructor.

Nov. 10 : Theme 2, as assigned by your instructor. As with all

(Mar. 16) : themes prepared outside of class, you may be asked to

read Theme 2 aloud during the class meeting.

15

Rhetoric 1 Sixth Week

Nov. 13 : '-The Narrative" UEC pp. 646-661.

(Mar. 19):

Nov. 15 : "Types of Narration" UEC pp. 661-668 and such narra-(Mar, 21): tives (pp. 668-701) as are assigned by your instructor.

Nov. 17 : Theme 3, an incident. Before writing, read RFC pp. 299-

(Mar. 23): 319.

16

Rhetoric 1 Seventh Week

Nov. 20 : Anecdotes and sketches in RFC pp. 319-335.

(Mar. 26):

Nov. 22 : Theme 4, an anecdote or sketch which you should be

(Mar. 28): prepared to present orally to the class. The written

version should be turned in at the first of the hour.

Nov. 24 : Continued oral presentation of Theme 4.

(Mar. 30):

17

Rhetoric 1 Eighth Week

Nov. 27 : Theme 5, an impromptu. Before class, read UEC pp. 540-

(Apr. 2): 545 and RFC 146-157.

Nov.(Apr.

29 : "The Book Review" UEC pp. 589-606.

4):

Dec.(Apr.

1 : Book reviews in RFC pp. 189-209 as assigned by your

6) : instructor.

18

Rhetoric 1 Eleventh Week

Dec. 18 : "The Process" UEC pp. 385-398.

(Apr. 23):

Dec. 20 : Theme 8, impromptu, an explanation of a process. In(Apr. 25): preparation, read selections in RFC pp. 39-60, as assigned

by your instructors.

Dec. 21-27: Christmas vacation.

Dec. 29 : "Mechanisms and Organization" UEC pp. 398-415.

(Apr. 27): (Note the Jan. 12 and 19 mention of Theme 11. Youshould, by the end of next week, decide on a subject for

that composition.)

21

Rhetoric 1 Twelfth Week

Jan. 1 : Selections in RFC pp. 60-107, as assigned by your in-

(Apr. 30) : structor.

Jan. 3 : "Effectiveness" UEC pp. 239-251.

(May 2):

Jan. 5 : Theme 9, an exposition of a mechanism or organization.

(May 4):

22

Rhetoric 1 Thirteenth Week

Jan. 8 : Continued reading of Theme 9.

(May 7):

Jan. 10 : "The Precis" UEC pp. 359-370.

(May 9):

Jan. 12 : At the first of this hour you should hand in a precis or

(May 11): informal outline for Theme 11, a long exposition based onpersonal experience or observation.

Theme 10, impromptu: a precis of a prose composition

selected by your instructor.

23

Rhetoric 1 Fourteenth Week

Jan. 15 : Discussion of the writing of examinations.(May 14) :

Jan. 17 ; Continued discussion of the writing of examinations.

May 16):

Jan. 19 : Theme 11, a long exposition based on personal experience

(Maj' 18) : or observation.

24

Rhetoric 1 Fifteenth Week

Jan. 22 : Informal talk. Come to class prepared to speak for about

(May 21) : three minutes on some subject in which you are interested.

The UEC chapter on the informal essay, pp. 607-627,

may give you some ideas.

Jan. 24 : Continuation of preceding assignment.

(May 23):

Jan. 26 : Final examinations begin.

(May 25):

25

Rhetoric 2 Theme Record

Study the textbook explanation of rules violated. Consult in-

structor if errors recur persistently.

Theme Errors Made Grade

I

3 ;

4 L

6

7

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

26

Individual Spelling List

27

Rhetoric 2 Objectives and Plan

Rhetoric 2, expecting a higher standard of achievement than that

prevailing in Rhetoric 1, is primarily concerned with analytical and

argumentative exposition. It is designed to perfect the abilities you

developed in Rhetoric 1 and to develop in you the ability (1) to digest

and evaluate the ideas of others, (2) to investigate and report the

results of such investigation, (3) to test the arguments of others, and

(4) to present jour own arguments logically and persuasively.

Weeks !• 8: Analytical exposil'ion.

Practice in formal outlining, to enable you to grasp

more readilv the ideas in the complex exposition you

read and to organize your own ideas for effective pres-

entation.

Reading of models, with emphasis on organization and

the relationship of ideas.

Guidance in how to use the library and how to plan

and document exposition based on library research.

Themes: outlines, analyses, and research papers. One

book report.

Weeks 9-15: Argumentation.

Reading articles in textbooks and current magazines and

newspapers, with consideration of the types of reasoning,

the fallacies, and the devices of persuasion commonly used.

Argumentative themes. One long research theme. One

book report.

28

RHETORIC 2 CALENDAR

All assignments here made are subject to change by individualinstructors. You are advised to give careful attention to and makewritten note of assignment instructions given in the classroom.

UEC—Unified English Composition

RFC—Readings for Composition

Rhetoric 2 First Week

Feb. 14 : Announcement of texts and assignments. You will be

(Oct. 11): asked to speak informally for one minute on a subject

suggested by your instructor.

Feb. 16 : Be prepared to discuss 'The Outline" UEC pp. 339-348

(Oct. 13): and "Getting a Living" RFC pp. 173-177.

29

Rhetoric 2 Second Week

Feb. 19 : Study the organization of "Benjamin Franklin as Poor(Oct. 16): Richard" RFC pp. 110-118.

Feb. 21 : Theme 1, an outline of an essay assigned by your(Oct. 18): instructor.

Feb. 23 : Discussion of Theme 1.

(Oct. 20):

30

Rhetoric 2 Third Week

Feb. 26 : Study the organization of "The Importance of Du<;t"(Oct. 23): UEC pp. 282-292.

Feb. 28 : Discussion of the Green Caldron, as assigned by your(Oct. 25): instructor.

Mar. 2 : Theme 2, an outline of an essav assigned bv vour(Oct. 27): instructor.

31

Rhetoric 2 Fourth Week

Mar. 5 : "Definition" UEC pp. 371-385, as assigned by your in-

(Oct. 30): structor.

Mar. 7 : "Definition" RFC pp. 479-504, as assigned by your in-

(Nov. 1) : structor.

Mar. 9 : Theme 3, an outline of an original essay of definition

(Nov. 3): which you plan to write as Theme 4.

32

Rhetoric 2 Fifth Week

Mar 12 : "Analysis" UEC pp. 415-437.(Nov. 6)

:

Mar. 14 : "Analysis" RFC pp. 504-533.(Nov. 8):

Mar. 16 : Theme 4, an essay of definition.(Nov. 10):

33

Rhetoric 2 Sixth Week

Mar. 19 : "The Research Paper" UEC pp. 457-469.

(Nov. 13):

Mar. 21 : "The Research Paper" UEC pp. 469-484. Bring to class

(Nov. 15): several topics for Theme 7, a short research paper. Beprepared to discuss the research possibilities vrith the

class.

Mar. 23

(Nov. 17)

Continued discussion of research projects.

34

REFERENCE ROOMUNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY

1 Encyclopedia Britannica

2 New International Encyclopedia3 Encyclopedia Americana4 New English Dictionary

5 Webster's New International Dictionary

6 Funk and Wagnalls' New StandardDictionary

7 Century Dictionary8 Dictionary of National Biography9 Dictionary of American Biography10 Who's Who11 Who's Who in America12 Cambridge History of English

Literature

13 Cambridge History of AmericanLiterature

14 Cambridge Ancient History

15 Cambridge Medieval History

16 Cambridge Modern History

17 Harper's Dictionary of Classical

Literature

18 Bailey's Cyclopedia of AmericanAgriculture

19 Sturgis's Dictionary of Architecture

and Building20 Encyclopedia of Social Sciences

21 Lippincott's Gazetteer

22 Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature

23 Poole's Index24 International Index25 Industrial Arts Index26 Annual Magazine Subject Index27 New York Times Index28 United States Catalog29 Cumulative Book Index30 Atlases

31 Bound Periodicals

32 Current Periodicals

33 Foreign Language Dictionaries

34 Biblical and Religious Encyclopedias35 Statisrical Year Books36 Congressional Record37 The Engineering Index38 Grove's Dictionary of Music39 Census renorts

35

Rhetoric 2 Seventh Week

Mar. 26 : Theme 5, an impromptu. Bring theme paper to class for

(Nov. 20): this composition.

Mar. 28 : "The Feature Article" UEC pp. 504-518.

(Nov. 22):

Mar. 30 : Theme 6, a feature article.

(Nov. 24):

36

Rhetoric 2 Eighth Week

Apr. 2 : "The Research Paper" RFC pp. 534-572, as assigned by(Nov. 27) : your instructor.

Apr. 4 : Continuation of preceding assignment.(Nov. 29):

Apr. 6 : Theme 7, a short research paper.(Dec. 1):

-

37

Rhetoric 2 Ninth Week

Apr. 9 : Continued reading and discussion of Theme 7. (During(Dec. 4) : this week or the next you should, in consultation with

your instructor, decide on a topic for Theme 12, a longresearch project to be completed not later than the date

set by your instructor.)

Apr. 11 : "Expository Argument" UEC pp. 437-449.

(Dec. 6):

Apr. 13 : "Work Yoiw Way Through College?" UEC pp. 449-456.

(Dec. 8):

Rhetoric 2 Tenth Week

Apr. 16 : Theme 8, an argumentative composition.(Dec. 11):

Apr. 18 : "Expository Argument" UEC pp. 437-449 and Green(Dec. 13): Caldron selections assigned by your instructor.

Apr. 20 : "Propaganda Techniques of German Fascism" UEC pp.(Dec. 15): 488-503.

39

Rhetoric 2 Eleventh Week

Apr. 23 : "Should Mexico Be Industrialized?" RFC pp. 662-670.

(Dec. 18):

Apr. 25 : Bring to class an example which you have found in a

(Dec. 20) : newspaper or magazine of the use or misuse of emotionalappeal in argument.

Apr. 27 : Theme 9, an editorial based on sound reasoning. Be(Dec. 29): prepared to present your argument to the class orally,

without reading.

40

Rhetoric 2 Fourteenth Week

May 14 : Theme 12, a long research paper. Be prepared to discuss

(Jan. 15) : your paper with the class.

May 16 : Continued reading and discussion of Theme 12.

(Jan. 17):

May 18 : Continued reading and discussion of Theme 12.

(Jan. 19):

43

Rhetoric 2 Fifteenth Week

May 21 : Informal talk. Come to class prepared to speak for about

(Jan. 22) : three minutes on sfMne subject in which you are interested.

Maj 23 : Continaation of informal talks.

(Jan. 2+):

Nlav 25 : FLaa^ examioatioos begin.

BOOKS RE.\D

BOOKS READ

46

READING LIST

The books on this list are shelved in the 7-Day Book Room (Room104 of the University Library). This entire room is given over to

the use of students in Rhetoric 1 and 2 in order to encourage goodreading among freshmen. The books are arranged on the shelves mthe same order in which the titles are listed below. You are expectedto select your books directly from the shelves with the aid of a cardfile containing brief descriptions of all books on the list. A librarian

is always in the room to help you in the selection of books.

Hours of the 7-Day Book Room are as follows: Monday throughFriday, 9 to 12, 2 to 5, and 7 to 10 ; Saturday, 9 to 12, 2 to 5. Theroom is closed on Saturday nights. When it is closed, books may bereturned to North Reserve.

Books may be taken out for one week (with certain exceptions

which may circulate for a longer time) and are renewable unless

previously reserved by another student. By leaving your name at

the desk, you may reserve a book in circulation and you will be

notified when it is available for your use. The fine for overdue books

is twenty-five cents a day until the book is returned.

The latest numbers of the Saturday Rc-viez:j of Literature and the

book review sections of the .Vt'^c York Herald Tribune and the Xeii;

York Times as well as a complete file of The Green Caldron are

available for use in the 7-Day Book Room.

NONFICTIOXB—BiographyT—TravelS—Science

A—Arts

E—EssaySS—Social points of view

Abend, Hallett, Chaos in Asia, T, SSAdamic, Louis, From Many Lands, SSAdamic, Louis, Native's Return, T, SS, BAdams, Henry, Education of Henry Adams, B, SSAdams, James Truslow, Our Business Cii'ilization, SSAgar, Herbert, Land of the Free, SSAgar, Herbert, A Time for Greatness, SSAkeley, Carl E., In Brightest Africa, TAkele_v, Delia J., Jungle Portraits, TAldrich, Thomas Bailey, Story of a Bad Boy, BAllen, Frederick, Only Yesterday: an Informal History of the \ine-

teen-T<v;enties, SSAllen, Frederick, Since Yesterday: The Sineteen-Thirties in America,

B, SSAndrews, C. F., Mahatma Ghandi: His 0<ix;n Story, B, SSAndrews, Roy Chapman, On the Trail of Ancient Man, TAndrews, Roy Chapman, Under a Lucky Star, B, TAnshen, Ruth Nauda, Freedom: Its Meaning, SSArliss, George, Up the Years from Bloomsbury, B, AArmstrong, Hamilton, Jf'e or They: Tv-'o Jf'orlds in Conflict, SS

47

Armstrong, Louise, fFe Too Are the People, SSArmstrong, Margaret, Trelawny, B, TArnold, Thurman, The Folklore of Capitalism, SSAtherton, Gertrude, Adventures of a Novelist, BAtkinson, Miles, Behind the Mask of Medicine, S

Auden, W. H. and Isherwood, Christopher, Journey to a ff'ar, T, SSAustin, Marv H., The Land of Journey's Ending (the Southwest), TBache, Carol", Paradox Isle, T, SSBakeless, John, Master of the Wilderness, Daniel Boone, BBaker, R. H., When the Stars Come Out, S

Baldwin, H. W., and Stone, Shepard (eds.), tVe Saiv It Happen:the Ne<ws Behind the Ne<u;s, SS

Barzun, Jacques, Of Human Freedom (a defense of democracy), SSBarzun, Jacques, Race: A Study in Modern Superstition, S, SSBarrie. Sir James M., Margaret Ogilvy (biography of his mother), BBasil, George C, Test Tubes and Dragon Scales (an American doctor

in China), B, T, S

Beard, Charles A.. Public Policy and the General Welfare, SSBeard, Charles A., The Republic, SSBeard, Charles and Mar}', Rise of American Civilization, SSBeatt\', Clyde and Anthony, E., The Big Cage, S

Beattv, Clvde and Wilson, Earl, Jungle Performers, S

Bechdolt, Frederick, Giants of the Old West, BBeebe, Lucius, High Iron: A Book of Trains, S

Beebe, William, Arcturus Adventure, S, TBeebe, William, Beneath Tropic Seas, S

Beebe, William, Book of Bays, S

Beebe, William, Galapagos, S, TBeebe, William, Jungle Peace, S

Beebe, William, Zacca Venture, S

Beer, Thomas, Hanna (politician of the McKinley era), SS, BBeer, Thomas, The Mauve Decade (American life in the 1890's), SSBeer, Thomas, Stephen Crane (American novelist), BBeerbohm, Max, And Even Now, EBeerbohm, Max, More, EBeerbohm, Max, A Variety of Things, EBelloc, Hilaire, Joan of Arc, BBelloc, Hilaire, On Everything (conversation on minor topics), EBelloc, Hilaire, This and That and the Other, EBenchley, Robert, After 1903—Whatf, EBenchley, Robert, Benchley Beside Himself, EBenchley, Robert, Inside Benchley, EBenchley, Robert, My Ten Years in a Quandary, EBenedict, Ruth, Race, S, SSBenmosche, M., A Surgeon Explains, S

Benson, A. C, From a College Windovu (on religion, education, liter-

ature), EBenson, Edward F., Queen Victoria's Daughters, BBent, Silas, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes: a Biography, SS, BBenton, T. H., An Artist in America, A, BBercovici, Konrad, Around the World in Neza York, TBercovici, Konrad, The Story of the Gypsies, SS, BBerenson, Bernhard, The Italian Painters of the Renaissance, A, BBerezowsky, Alice, Duct ivith Nicky, A, B

48

Beston, Henry, St. Laivrence, TBidou, Henry, Chopin, A, BBligh, William, Bligh and the Bounty (the original account of the

mutiny on the Bounty), TBHven, Bruce, Men WJio Make the Future, S

Boas, Franz, The Mind of Primitive Man, S, SSBoas, Louise S., Elizabeth Barrett Broivning, BBoswell, James, Life of Samuel Johnson, BBowen, Catherine, Friends and Fiddlers (on delights of music), E, ABowen, Elizabeth, Yankee from Olympus (biography of Judge Oliver

Wendell Holmes), B, SS _

Bowers, Claude G., Jefferson in Poiver: the Death Struggle of the

Federalists, B, SSBowers, Claude G., Tragic Era: the Re-volution after Lincoln, SSBraddell, Darcey, Hoijj to Look at Buildings, ABradford, Gamaliel, Confederate Portraits (Southern leaders of the

Civil War), BBradford, Gamaliel, Lee, the American, BBragg, W. H., Concerning the Nature of Things, SBragg, W. H., The Universe of Light, SBranch, Douglas, Tlie Coivboy and His Interpreters, TBrazdova, Amelie (Posse), In the Beginning JVas the Light (biog-

raphy of a Swedish girl), B, TBrewster, Edwin T., This Puzzling Planet, S

Brickner, Richard, Is Germany Incurable?, SSBrillat-Savarin, Jean A., The Physiology of Taste (on fine food and

wine), EBrittain, Vera, Testament of Youth (a girl's experience in World

War I), B, SSBrodie, Bernard, A Layman's Guide to Naval Strategy, S

Brooks, Charles S., Chimney-pot Papers (on common evervday life), EBrooks, C. P., Why the ^ Weather?, SBrown, Cecil, Suez to Singapore, SSBrown, Harriet C, Grandmother Broissn's Hundred Years, 1827-

1927, BBrowne, Waldo, Altgeld of Illinois, B, SSBruun, Geoffrey, Clemenceau, B, SSByron, George S., The Spy in America, SSBuchan, John, A Book of Escapes and Hurried Journeys, TBuchan, John, Pilgrim's IFay (biography of an author statesmen), B SS

Buck, Pearl S., The Exile (an American woman in China), B, TBuck, Pearl S., Fighting Angel (Miss Buck's father: a companion

book to The Exile), B, TBulliet, C. J., Apples and Madonnas: Emotional Expression in Modern

Art (handbook on modern painting and sculpture), ABulliet, C. J., The Significant Moderns and Their Pictures (biographi-

cal and critical sketches of 68 painters), A, BBurbank, Luther and Hall, Wilbur, The Harvest of Years, S, BBurgess, Perry, JVho JTalk Alone (life in a leper colony) S, BBurlingame, Roger, Engines of Democracy, S, SSBurlingame, Roger, March of the Iron Men, S, SSBurnham, James, Managerial Revolution, SSBurns, Eugene, Then Tliere JVas One (aircraft carrier in World

War I), SS

49

Burt, Struthers, Powder River (the West), TBurton, Katherine, Paradise Planters; tlie Story of Brook Farm (a

social experiment in the 1840's), SSByrd, Richard E., Alone, TByrd, Richard E., Little America, TByrd, Richard E., Skyivard, TCabot, Hugh, T/ie Patient's Dilemma, S

Calkins, C, Spy Overhead, the Story of Industrial Espionage, SSCall, Hughie, Golden Fleece (life on a sheep ranch), B, TCanby, Henry S., Alma Mater (Yale in the 1890's), SSCanby, Henry S., IFalt IVhitman, an American, BCarlson, John Roy, Under Cover, SSCarmer, Carl, Listen for a Lonesome Drum (upstate New York), TCarmer, Carl, Stars Fell on Alabama, TCarse, Robert, There Go the Ships (merchant marine during war), TCaulaincourt, Armand de, fFith Napoleon in Russia, B, SSCellini, Benvenuto, Autobiograpliy, A, BChamberlain, W. H., Japan over Asia, SSCharnwood, Lord, Abraham Lincoln (an Englishman appraises Lin-

coln), BChase, Ilka, Past Imperfect (witty autobiography of an actress), BChase, Mary Ellen, A Goodly Heritage (childhood in Maine), BChase, Marv Ellen, This England (essavs on the climate, food, travel,

etc.), T, EChase, Stuart, Goals for America, SSChase, Stuart, Men and Machines, SSChase, Stuart and Tyler, Marian, Mexico: A Study of the Tivo

Americas (comparison of a civilization based on handicraft withone based on machinery), T, SS

Chase, Stuart, Rich Land, Poor Land; a Study of JFaste in the NaturalResources of America, SS

Chase, Stuart, The Tragedy of IVaste, SSCheney, Sheldon, A Primer of Modern Art, AChesterton, G. K., Autobiograpliy, BChesterton, G. K., Charles Dickens, BChesterton, G. K., Robert Broivning, BChesterton, G. K., Tremendous Trifles (on the significance of com-

mon things), EChilds, M. W., Sweden; the Middle Way, T, SSChurchill, Winston, Blood, Sweat and Tears, E, SSClark, Thomas, Pills, Petticoats, and Ploivs (the country store), SS, TCleaveland, Agnes Morley, No Life for a Lady (a girl's life in the

early West), B, TClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), Innocents Abroad, TClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), Life on the Mississippi, T, BClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), Mark Twain's Autobiography, BClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), Personal Recollections of Joan

of Arc, BClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), Roughing It, T, BClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), A Tramp Abroad, TClinton, D. J., Man of Glory, Simon Bolivar (South America's Wash-

ington), SS, B, TCodv. William. An Autobiography of Buffalo Bill, BCoffin, Howard N., Malta Story, SS

50

Coffin, Robert P., Lost Paradise ; a BoyJiood on a Maine Coast Farm, BColum, Padraic, The Road Round Ireland, TConrad, Joseph, Personal Record, BCook, James, Three Voyages of Discovery (1728-1779), TCopland, Aaron, JVhat to Listen for in Music, ACornell, Katherine, / Wanted to be an Actress, B, ACousins, Norman, The Good Inheritance, SSCoward, Noel, Personal Indicative (with autobiography of the actor-

playwright), A, BCowles, Virginia, Looking for Trouble, SSCrafford, F. S., Jan Smuts, B, SSCram, Ralph Adams, My Life in Architecture, A, BCraven, Thomas, Men of Art (from Giotto to latest masters of French

Modernism), A, BCraven, Thomas, Story of Painting, ACreasy, Edward Shepherd, Fifteen Decisive Battles of the IVorld, S

Cross, W. L., Connecticut Yankee (autobiography of a Connecticut

educator-statesman), B, SSCrow, Carl, The Chinese Are Like That, TCrow, Carl, 400 Million Customers (the Chinese), T, SSCullen, Lucy, Beyond the Smoke that Thunders (Africa), TCunha, Euclides Da, Rebellion in the Backlands, SS, TCurie, Eve, Journey Among JVarriors, SSCurie, Eve, Madame Curie, B, S

Curtis, Brian, Tlie Life Story of the Fish, S

Daley, Reginald, The Floor of the Ocean, S

Damon, Bertha, Grandma Called It Carnal, BDana, Richard H., Jr., Tvno Years before the Mast, TDarwin, C. G., Nevo Conceptions of Matter, S

Darwin, Charles, On the Origin of Species, S

Davenport, Marcia, Mozart, B, ADavies, Joseph Edward, Mission to Moscoiv, T, SSDavis, William Stearns, Life in Elizabethan Days, SSDavis, William Stearns, Life on a Medieval Barony, SSDay, Clarence, Life with Father, B, EDean, Vera, Europe in Retreat, SSDeKruif, Paul, Kaiser JVakes the Doctors, S, SSDeland, Margaret, // This Be I, BDeLeeuw, Adolph L., Rambling through Science, S

Der Ling, Princess, Tivo Years in the Forbidden City (China before

its Revolution), T, SSDe Seversky, Alexander P., Victory through Air Poiver, S

Diamant, Gertrude, Days of Ofelia (Mexico), T, SSDickinson, G. Lowes, After Two Thousand Years (modern world as

viewed by Socrates), SSDickinson, G. Lowes, The Greek Vieiv of Life, SSDickinson, G. Lowes, A Modern Symposium (on politics and phi-

losophy), SSDimnet, Ernest, The Art of Thinking, EDinesen, Isak, Out of Africa, TDitmars, Raymond L., The Forest of Adventure (South America), TDorian, Fred, History of Music in Performance, ADosPassos, Tohn, Thr Ground JVe Stand On (American govern-

ment), SS

51

DosPassos, John, Journeys hetiveen IVars, T, SSDoughty, Charles M., Tra-vels in Arabia Deserta, TDownes, Olin, The Lure of Music, ADrinkvvater, John, Oliver Cromivell, BDuBois, W. E. B., Black Folk Then and Noiu, S, SSDuBois, W. E. B., Dusk of Daivn (Negro leader), B, SSDuguid, Julian, Green Hell: Ad-ventures in Mysterious Jungles of

Eastern Bolivia, TDuMaurier, Daphne, The DuMauriers, BDuranty, Walter, / JVrite as I Please (by a journalist), B, T, SSEaton, Walter Prichard, Penguin, Persons and Peppermints, EEddington, A. S., Stars and Atoms, S

Edman, Irwin, Arts and the Man: a Short Introduction to Aesthetics,

SS, AEdman, Irwin, Philosopher's Holiday, B, EEinstein, Albert and Infeld, L., The Evolution of Physics, SEisenschiml, Otto, Jf'ithout Fame (autobiography of a Chicago chem-

ist), B, S

Ellsberg, Edward, On the Bottom (raising of a submarine), S

Ellwood, Charles, The JVorld's Need of Christ, SSEmerson, Ralph Waldo, Essays (first series), EEnglebrecht, H. C. and Hanighen, F. C, Merchants of Death (muni-

tion makers), SS, BEnglebrecht, H. C, The Revolt against War, SSErb, R. C, Poisoning the Public, S

Erskine, John, Tlie Kinds of Poetry and Other Essays, AEwen, David, Dictators of the Baton, AEwen, David, Story of George Gershivin, A, BEwen, David, Tiventieth Century Composers, AFadiraan, Clifton (ed.), / Believe: the Personal Philosophies of Certain

Eminent Men and JVomen of Our Time, E, SSFalls, Cyril, The Nature of Modern JFarfare, S

Federal Writers' Project, These Are Our Lives (the underprivi-leged), SS

Feild, Robert, The Art of If'alt Disney, AFellowes, P. E. M., and others, Houston-Mount Everest Expedition,

First over Everest, T, S

Ferber, Edna, A Peculiar Treasure, SS, BFerguson, De Lancy, Mark Tivain: Man and Legend, BFergusson, Erma, Our Southivest, TFergusson, Harvey, Rio Grande (New Mexico), TFirestone, Clark, Bubbling Waters (Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, In-

diana), TFlack, Isaac, Story of Surgery, S

Flandrau, Charles Macomb, Fiva Mexico, TFleming, Peter, Brazilian Adventure, TFleming, Peter, Neivs from Tartary: a Journey from Pekin to Kash-

mir, TFlexner, James T., Doctors on Horseback, B, S

Flint, W. P. and Metcalf, C. L., Man's Chief Competitors, S

Flynn, John T., God's Gold ; Story of Rockefeller and His Times, SS, BForbes, Esther, Paul Revere and the IVorld He Lived In, BFowler, Gene, Good Night, Siueet Prince (biography of John Barry-

more), B, A52

Fox, Ernest F., Travels in Afghanistan, TFranck, Harry A., Four Months Afoot in Spain, TFranck, Harry A., A Scandinavian Summer, TFranklin, Benjamin, Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, BFrazer, Sir James George, The Golden Bough (the greatest studv of

folklore), SSFreuchen, Peter, Arctic Adventure, TFurnas, C. C. and S. M., Man, Bread and Destiny ; the Story of Man's

Food, S, SSFurnas, C. C, The Next Hundred Years, S, SSFurnas, C. C, Hoiv America Lives, SSGaisberg, Fred, The Music Goes Round, A, BGaldston, lago. Progress in Medicine, S, SSGalloway, G. B., and others. Planning for America, SSGalsworthy, John, A Commentary (written to puncture the compla-

cency of the middle class), E, SSGalsworthy, John, The Inn of Tranquility, EGalsworthy, John, A Motley (stories, studies and impressions), EGamow, George, Biography of the Earth, S

Gamow, George, Mr. Tompkins in JVonderland, S

Garland, Hamlin, The Book of the American Indian, TGarland, Hamlin, Son of the Middle Border, B, SSGauss, Christian, Life in College, E, SSGeddes, Norman Bel, Horizons (modern streamlining), AGibbs, Sir Philip, Ordeal in England, SSGoldschmidt, Richard, Ascaris: the Biologist's Story of Life, S

Goodale, Katherine, Behind the Scenes with Ediuni Booth (famousShakepearean actor), B, A

Gorman, Herbert S., The Incredible Marquis: Alexander Dumas, BGrabbe, Paul, IVe Call It Human Nature, S

Grahame, Kenneth, Pagan Papers (essays on loafing and similar

subjects), EGraves, Robert, Goodbye to All That (World War I), BGray, George W., The Advancing Front of Medicine, SGray, George W., The Advancing Front of Science, S

Great Britain, Combined Operations: the Official Story of the Com-mandos, S

Green, Julian, Memories of Happy Days (the author's youth in

Paris), BGrenfell, Wilfred T., Labrador Days, TGrenfell, Wilfred T., A Labrador Doctor, B, S

Grey, James, The Illinois (river), TGriffith, L. W., Spring of Youth (boyhood in Wales), BGunther, John, Inside Asia, SS, TGunther, John, Inside Europe, SS, THagen, O. F., Art Epochs and Their Leaders, AHahn, Emily, The Soong Sisters, B, THakluyt, Richard, A Selection of the Principal Voyages, Traffiques

and Discoveries of the English Nation (one of the great travel

books of the world), THalle, Louis, River of Ruins, THalsev, Margaret, IFith Malice tovi'ard Some (an American considers

the English), T, SSHamilton, Alice, Exploring the Dangerous Trades, SS, B, S

53

Handy, W. C, Father of the Blues, B, AHansen, Harry, The Chicago (river), THarding, Bertita, Phantom Croiun (story of Maximillian and Carlotta

in Mexico), BHarrison, G., Atoms in Action, S

Haskell, Arnold, Ballet Panorama, AHaskell, Arnold, Diagliilejf (creator of the Russian ballet), AHaskell, H. J., This IVas Cicero: Modern Politics in a Roman

Toga, B, SSHatfield, William, I Find Australia, B, THathaway, Katharine Butler, Little Locksmith, BHavighurst, Walter, The Long Ships Passing (Great Lakes region), THavighurst, Walter, The Upper Mississippi; a JVilderness Saga, THaynes, William, The Chemical Front, SHaynes, William, This Chemical Age: Miracle of Man-Made Mate-

rials, S

Hazlitt, William, Essays (by a man who enjoyed living), EHearn, Lafcadio, Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan, THearn, Lafcadio, Japanese Letters, BHedin, Sven, Chiang Kai-shek, BHedin, Sven, My Life as an Explorer, B, THegner, R. W., Big Fleas Have Little Fleas, S

Heiden, Konrad, Der FUehrer, B, SSHeiser, Victor, American Doctor's Odyssey, B, S

Helm, MacKinley, Angel Mo' and Her Son, Roland Hayes, B, AHergesheimer, Joseph, San Cristobal de la Hahana (Havana), THersey, John, Into the Valley (Marines on Guadalcanal), SSHewlett, Maurice, Last Essays (a pleasant picture of country life), EHildebrand, Arthur Sturges, Magellan, BHillarv, Richard, Falling through Space (storv of an R. A. F.

pi'lot), B, SSHindus, Maurice, Broken Earth (life in Soviet Russia), T, SSHindus, Maurice, Mother Russia, T, SSHindus, Maurice, IFe Shall Live Again (Czecho-Slovakia), T, SSHobson, Wilder, American Jazz Music, AHodgins, Eric, and Magown, F. A., Behemoth, S, SSHoffman, Malvina, Heads and Tales (a sculptor's worldwide search

for models). A, B.

Hogben, Lancelot, Science for the Citizett, S, SSHolman, Gordon, Commando Attack, S

Holt, Rackham, George JVashington Carver, B, S

Hooton, Ernest A., Apes, Men and Morons, S, SSHooton, Ernest A., Man's Poor Relatives, S, SSHough, H. B., Country Editor, B, SSHowe, W. D., Charles Lamb and His Friends, BHuberman, Leo, Man's Worldly Goods, SSHudson, W. H., The Book of a Naturalist, S

Hudson, W. H., Far Aivay and Long Ago, B, THudson, W. H., The Purple Land, T, SSHughes, Langston, The Big Sea (autobiographv of a Negro writer),

B, SSHulbert, A. B., Forty-Niners, SSHungerford, Edward, Men and Iron: the History of the AV-xf York

Central, S

54

Hurston, Zora Xeale, Dust Tracks on a Road (witty autobiographyof a Negro anthropologist), B

Huxley, Aldous, Ends and Means, E, SSHuxley, Julian, Essays in Popular Science, S, EHuxley, Julian, A Scientist among the Soviets, S, SSIckes, Harold, Autobiography of a Curmudgeon, B, SSIrving, Washington, The Alhambra (Spain), TIshimoto, Shidzue, Facing Tzvo ff'ays (a Japanese woman tells of

Japan and America), B, TJacks, G. v.. Vanishing Lands: A Jf'orld Study of Soil Erosion, S, SSJackson, Joseph, Notes on a Drum (Guatemala), TJaffe, Bernard, Crucibles (lives of great chemists), B, SJaffe, Bernard, Outposts of Science, S

James, Marquis, The Ra-ven; a Biography of Sam Houston, BJames, Sehvyn, South of the Congo, T, SSJames, Will, Coiv Country, TJames, William, Selected Papers in Philosophy, EJastrow, Joseph, The Story of Human Error, S

Jeans, J. H., and others. Scientific Progress, S

Jeans, J. H., The Universe around Us, S

Johnson, Henry, The Other Side of Main Street (autobiography of

a teacher), BJohnson, J. W., Along this ff'ay (one of the foremost American

Negroes), BJohnson, Martin, Lion, TJohnson, Osa, / Married Adventure, B, TJohnston, Samuel Paul, Horizons Unlimited, S

Johnston, Stanley, Queen of the Flat Tops, S

Jones, H. Spencer, Life on Other ff'orlds, S

Jordan, Henry P., Problems of Post-War Reconstruction, SSJosephson, Matthew, The President Makers, SSJosephson, Matthew, The Robber Barons, The Great American Capi-

talists, 1861-1901, B, SSKarlson, Paul, World around Us: a Modern Guide to Physics, S

Kasner, E., & Newman, J., Mathematics and the Imagination, S

Keith, Agnes, Land belovi; the Wind, TKeller, Helen, Story of My Life, BKelly, Fred C, Wright Brothers, B, S

Kennv, Elizabeth, And They Shall Walk (treatment of infantile paral-

vsis), S, BKent, Rockwell, X by E (North Pole), TKent, Rockwell, Salamina (life in Greenland), TKent, Rockwell, Voyaging Southivard from the Strait of Magellan, TKent, Rockwell, ll'ilderness ; a Journal of Quiet Adventure in

Alaska, TKimbrough, Emily, Jl'e Follov^'ed Our Hearts to Hollyvi-ood, BKimmel, Stanley, Mad Booths of Maryland (the actors, including the

murderer of Lincoln), B, AKirstein, Lincoln, The Dance, AKotschnig, Walter NL, Slaves Need No Leaders (Nazi education), SSKraus, Rene, If'inston Churchill, B, SSKuhn, Helmut, Freedom Forgotten and Remembered, SSLamb, Charles, Essays of Elia; First Series, ELamb, Charles, Essays of Elia; Second Series, E

55

Lamb, Charles, Last Essays of Elia, ELandowska, Wanda, Music of the Past, ALang, Andrew, Ad'ventures among Boohs, ELarson, Lawrence, Log Book of a Young Immigrant, B, SSLaski, Harold, Rise of Liberalistn, SSLaski, Harold L., JFhere Do JVe Go From Here?, SSLawrence, T. E., Revolt in tlie Desert (the arabs in World War

I), TLawson, Ted W., Thirty Seconds over Tokyo, SSLeacock, Stephen, Hovu to JVrite, ELeacock, Stephen, My Discovery of England, ELeacock, Stephen, Too Much College, E, SSLee, Willis T., Stories in Stone, S

Lemon, Harvey B., Cosmic Rays Thus Far, S

Leonard, Royal, / Flciu for China, TLevant, Oscar, A Smattering of Ignorance, E, ALewis, Oscar, The Big Four (men who built the railroads), BLeyson, Burr, The Army Engineers in Review, SLincoln, Abraham, Speeches and Letters, 1832-1865, B, ELindbergh, Anne Morrow, Listen! the JVind, TLindbergh, Anne Morrow-, North to the Orient, TLinn, J, Webber, Jane Addams, B, SSLin Yutang, The Importance of Living, E, SSLin Yutang, My Country and My People, T, SSLin Yutang, JVitli Love and Irony, E, SSLippman, Walter, The Good Society, SSLippman, Walter, United States Foreign Policy, SSLips, Julius, The Savage Hits Back, ALocke, Alain Le Roy, Negro Art; Past and Present, ALockhart, John Gibson, Life of Sir JFalter Scott (abridged), BLondon, Jack, The Cruise of the Snark, TLoth, David, Alexander Hamilton, BLowell, James Russell, Fireside Travels, ELucas, E. v., A JFanderer in Paris, T, ELudwig, Emil, Bolivar: The Story of an Idealist, BLudwig, Emil, Germans: Double History of a Nation, T, SSLudwig, Emil, Napoleon, BLudwig, Emil, The Nile, T, SSLudwig, Emil, Three Titans (Michelangelo, Rembrandt, and Bee-

thoven), A, BLundberg, Ferdinand, America's 60 Families, SSLutes, Delia, Country Kitchen (life in rural Michigan), SSLynd, Robert, & Lynd, Helen, Middletoivn (sociological study of a

typical American community', in the late nineteen-twenties), SSLynd, Robert, & Lynd, Helen, Middletoivn in Transition (a study of

the same community during the depression), SSLyons, E. (ed.), JVe Cover the JForld (by sixteen foreign newspaper

correspondents), SSMcDonald, Argus, Old McDonald Had a Farm (farm life in Okla-

homa), B, SSMcFee, William, Sviallovjing the Anchor (a ship's engineer on

shore), EMcGuire, Paul, IFesiivard the Course (Oceania), TMackenzie, Catherine, Alexander Graham Bell, B, S

56

MacPherson, Margaret, / Heard the Anzacs Singing, TMcWilliams, Carey, Brothers under the Skin (minority groups in the

United States), SSMcWilliams, Carey, Factories in the Field (migratory field workers in

California), SSMadariaga, Salvador de, Hernan Cortes, Conqueror of Mexico, BMaeterlinck, Maurice, Life of tlie Bee, S

Magoffin, Ralph Van D., Magic Spades: Romance of Archeology, SMaillart, Ella, Forbidden Journey from Pekin to Kashmir (compare

with Fleming: Neivs from Tartary), TMajor, Ralph H., Fatal Partners: War and Disease, S, SSMann, Carl, Lightning in the Sky: the Story of Jimmy Doolitile, BMann, Erika and Klaus, The Other Germany, TMarie, Grand Duchess of Russia, Education of a Princess (the Russian

Revolution), BMaugham, William Somerset, Andalusia (Southern Spain), TMaurois, Andre, Ariel (life of Shelley), BMaurois, Andre, Byron, BMaurois, Andre, / Remember, I Remember (autobiography), BMaurois, Andre, Miracle of England, T, SSMead, Margaret, And Keep Your Poivder Dry, S, SSMears, Helen, Year of the Wild Boar (prewar Japan), T, SSMencken, H. L., Happy Days (Mencken's boyhood), BMencken, H. L,, Neiuspaper Days, 1899-1906, BMerriam, Charles, What Is Democracy?, SSMerriam, J. C, The Living Past, S

Miller, John, Fares, Please!, S, SSMillikan, Robert A., Science and Neiu Civilization, S, SSMillis, Walter, The Road to War: American, 1914-1917, SSMills, Enos A., Romance of Geology, SMilne, A. A., Not That It Matters (on games, books, snobbery, etc.), EMontague, Lady Mary Wortley, Travel Letters (from Turkey in the

eighteenth century), B, TMorehouse, Ward, George M. Cohan, B, AMorison, Samuel Eliot, Admiral of the Ocean Sea (the life of Christo-

pher Columbus), BMorton, H. V., / Saiu Tvjo Englands, T, SSMuir, John, Travels in Alaska, TMukerji, Dhan Gopal, Caste and Outcast (India and America), T, SS

Mukerji, Dhan Gopal, My Brother's Face (India), T, SSMukerji, Dhan Gopal, Visit India ivith Me, T, SSMumford, Lewis, Faith for Living, SSMumford, Lewis, Sticks and Stones (architecture). A, SSMunthe, Axel, Story of San Michele (memoirs of a physician), BMussolini, Benito, My Autobiography, B, SSMytinger, Caroline, Headhunting in the Solomon Islands, T, ANatonek, Hans, In Search of Myself, B, SSNaumberg, Nancy, (ed.), We Make the Movies, ANerney, Mary Childs, Thomas A. Edison, a Modern Olympian, B, S

Nevins, Allen, Fremont; the West's Greatest Adventurer, BNew Yorker, Profiles from the New Yorker, BNewman, James, The Tools of War, S

Newton, A. Edgar, A Magnificant Farce, and Other Diversions of a

Book Collector, E

57

Nicoll, Allardyce, Film and Tlieatre, ANitobe, Inazo, Bushido, Soul of Japan (an exposition of Japanese

thought), T, SSO'Brien, Frederick, Mystic Isles of the South Seas, TOdum, Howard W., Race and Rumors of Race, SSOlson, Alma, Scandina-via: Background for Neutrality, SS, TOsborn, Henry Fairfield, Men of the Old Stone Age, S

Osborne, Dorothy, Letters of Dorothy Osborne to irilliam Temple(famous love letters of the seventeenth century), B

O'Sullivan, Maurice, T<ix:enty Years A-Groi:;ing (an Irish boyhood),T, B

Ottley, Roi, Ne=u: Jf'orld A-Coming, SSOverstreet, Harry, Our Free Minds, SSPanassie, Hughes, Real Jazz, AParkman, Francis, The Oregon Trail, TPartridge, Bellamy, Big Family, BPaul, Elliot, The Life and Death of a Spanish Toi^n, T, SSPauli, Herta E., Alfred Nobel, Dynamite King—Architect of Peace,

B, SSPearson, Hesketh, G. B. S., A Full Length Portrait (George Bernard

Shaw), B, SSPeattie, Donald Culross, (ed.), Audubon's America, SPeattie, Donald Culross, A Prairie Grove, E, S

Peattie, Donald Culross, The Road of a Naturalist, B, S

Peattie_j Donald Culross, Singing in the Jf'ilderness: A Salute to JohnJames Audobon, B, S

Percv, William Alexander, Lanterns on the Lei'ee, B, SSPerry, Bliss, And Gladly Teach, BPhillips. Henrv A., Meet the Japanese, T, SSPickwell, Gayle B., Weather, S

Polo, Marco, The Travels of Marco Polo, T, BPoncins, Contram de, Kabloona (Eskimos), TPoole, Ernest, The Bridge, B, SSPoole, Ernest, Giants Gone: Men JVho Made Chicago, B, TPowell, Arthur G., / Can Go Llome Again, BPower, Eileen, Medieval People (sketches of social life in the middle

ages), SSPriestlev, J. B., English Journey (effects of the depression in England),

T, "SS

Pupin, Michael, From Immigrant to Inventor, B, S, SSRadin, Max, The Lavi- and Mr. Smith, SSRay, Marie B., Doctors of the Mind, S, SSRedding, J. Saunders, No Day of Triumph (the Negro), SS, BReid, Edith Gittings, The Great Physician: A Short Life of Sir

Jl'illiam Osier, B, S

Reiser, Anton, Albert Einstein: A Biographical Portrait, B, SRenn, Ludwig, pseud., JVarfare, the Relation of JVar to Society, S

Repplier, Agnes, To Think of Tea (about the English institution of

tea drinking), EReston, James, Prelude to Victory, SSReynolds, Quentin, Convoy (autobiography of a newspaper man), BRich, Louise Dickinson, /fV Took to the Jf'oods, T, BRiesenberg, Felix, Living Again: An Autobiography (seaman, explorer,

editor, and novelist), B, T58

Riesenberg, Felix, Under Sail: A Boy's Voyage Around Cape Horn, TRiggs, Arthur S., The Romance of Human Progress, ARipley, Dillon, On the Trail of the Money Bird, S, TRittenhouse, I. Maud, Maud (life in Cairo, Illinois, during Grandma's

day), BRoberts, Kenneth, Trending into Maine, TRoberts, S. H., The House that Hitler Built, T, SSRolland, Remain, Musicians of Today (to 1908), ARoosevelt, Theodore, African Game Trails, TRoosevelt, Theodore, An Autobiography, B, SSRoosevelt, Theodore, Theodore Roosevelt's Letters to his Children, BRorke, J. D. M., A Musical Pilgrim's Progress, ARosten, Leo, Hollyicood, SSRothery, Agnes, Denmark: Kingdom of Reason, T, SSRourke, Constance, Audubon, B, S

Rourke, Thomas, pseud., See, Clinton, D. J. BRuskin, John, Selections from Ruskin, ERussell, Bertrand, The A B C of Relativity, S

Saint Exupery A., Flight to Arras (an aviator's experience during the

fall of France), SS, TSaint Exupery A., IVind, Sand and Stars (flying the mail), T, SSSandburg, Carl, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, B, SSSandburg, Carl, Storm over the Land, SSSanderson, I., Animal Treasure, S

Sanderson, I., Living Treasure, S

Sandoz, Mari, Crazy Horse, BSandoz, Mari, Old Jules (Nebraska pioneer life), B, SSSantayana, George, Persons and Places, B, SSSargeant, Winthrop, Jazz, Hot and Hybrid, ASasson, Siegfried, The Weald of Youth, BSchauffler, Robert, Fiddler's Luck (series of World War I sketches), ESchauffler, Robert H., Mad Musician (abridgement of his biography of

Beethoven), A, B,

Scheinfeld, Amram, You and Heredity, S

Schulman, Sammy, Where's Sammy? (autobiography of a professional

photographer), BSchuschnigg, Kurt, My Austria, T, SSSeabrook, William B., Adventures in Arabia, TSeabrook, William B., Jungle Ways, TSeabrook, William B., The Magic Island (Haiti), TSeabrook, William B., Witchcraft, S

Seagrave, Gordon S., Burma Surgeon, S, T, BSeldes, George, Freedom of the Press, SSSeldes, Gilbert, Saivdust Caesar (Mussolini), B, SSSeyd, Felizia, Romantic Rebel: the Life and Times of George Sand, BShapley, Harlow, Flights from Chaos, S

Sheean, Vincent, Between the Thunder and the Sun, T, SS

Sheean, Vincent, Personal History (autobiography of a journalist), B, SS

Sherman, Stuart Pratt, Americans, B, SSSherman, Stuart Pratt, My Dear Cornelia, ESherman, Stuart Pratt, Points of Vieiv, ESherman, Stuart Pratt, Shaping Men and Women (to University of

Illinois undergraduates), E, SSShiber, Etta, Paris Underground, SS

59

Shirer, William L., Berlin Diary, SS, TShridharani, Krishnalal, frar H'itJiout Violence: A Study of Ghandi's

Method and Its Accomplisliments, SS, TSiegfried, Andre, Impressions of South America, TSilverman, Milton, Magic in a Bottle, S

Simon, Robert E., Be Your Ov:n Music Critic, ASkariatina, Irina, First to Go Back, an Aristocrat in Soviet Russia, T, SSSkinner, Cornelia Otis, Dithers and Jitters, ESkinner, Cornelia Otis, Excuse It, Please, ESkinner, Cornelia Otis, Our Hearts If'ere Young and Gay, BSlosson, Edwin E., Creative Chemistry, S

Smith, Alexander, Dreamthorp (aspects of life in an English village), ESmith, Henry Ladd, Air^u^ays: The History of Commercial Aviation in

the United States, S

Smith, Logan P., Unforgotten Years, BSnow, Edgar, Red Star over China, SS, TSokolsky, George E., The Tinder Box of Asia, T, SSSonnichsen, C. L., Roy Bean: Lavj IFest of the Pecos, BSoule, George, Sidney Hillman (labor leader), B, SSSpaeth, Sigmund, The Art of Enjoying Music, ASpaeth, Sigmund, They Still Sing of Love, E, ASpaulding, O. L., Ahriman: A Study in Air Bombardment, SSpecht, Richard, Johannes Brahms, B, ASpence, Hartzell, Get Thee Behind Me, BStarkie Walter, Spanish Raggle-Taggle (gj'psies), TStefansson, Wh]z\u\uT,The Friendly Arctic, TStefansson, Vihjalmur, My Life ivith the Eskimos, TSteffens, Lincoln, Autobiography (twentieth-century journalist), B, SSSteinbeck, John, Bombs Aivay: the Story of a Bomber Team, SStevenson, Robert Louis, An Inland Voyage, TStevenson, Robert Louis, Travels ivith a Donkey, TStevenson, Robert Louis, Virginibus Puerisque and Other Papers, EStokowski, Leopold, Music for All, AStone, Irving, Clarence Darroiv, Attorney for the Defense, B, SSStowe, Leland, They Shall Not Sleep, SSStrachey, G. L\-tton, Eminent Victorians, BStrachey, G. Litton, Queen Victoria, BStrong, Anna Louise, / Change JVorlds (from America to Russia),

B, SS, TSubercaseaux, Benjamin, Chile, T, SSSullivan, Mark, The Education of An American, B SSSullivan, Mark, The Tvcenties, Volume VI of Our Times (the United

States from 1920-1930), SSTaft, Robert, Photography and the American Scene: A Social History,

S,SS

Taubman, Howard, Music on My Beat, ATawney, R. H., The Acquisitive Society, SSTaylor, A. E., Socrates, BTaylor, Deems, The Well Tempered Listener, E, AThackeray, William Makepeace, The Book of Snobs (ridicule of Eng-

lish snobbery), SS, EThomas, Bertram, Alarms and Excursions in Arabia, TThomas, Lowell, Beyond Khyber Pass, TThomas, Lowell, Count Luckner (World War I naval fighting), B

60

Thoreau, Henry, IValdcn, SS, EThorek, Max, A Surgeon's JVorld, S, BThouless, Robert H., //oiu to Think Straight, E, SThurber, James, My Life and Hard Times, EThurber, James, My JVorld and IFelcome to It, ETomlinson, H. M., London River (about the lower Thames), E, TTomlinson, H. M., The Sea and the Jungle, TTregaskis, Richard, Guadalcanal Diary, SSTrelawnv, Edward J., Adventures of a Younger Son, B, TTrumbull, Robert, The Raft, TTschiffeh-, A. P., Tschiffely's Ride: Ten Thousand Miles in the Saddle

from Southern Cross to Pole Star, TUdmark, John, The Road We Have Covered, S, SSVallery-Radot, Rene, The Life of Pasteur, B, S

Vandercook, John W., Dark Islands, TVan Doren, Mark, Liberal Education, SS, EVan Doren, Carl, Benjamin Franklin, B, SSVan Doren, Carl, Secret History of the American Revolution, SSVan Loon, H. W., The Arts, AVan Loon, H. W., R. V. R; Being an Account of the Last Years and

Death of one Rembrandt Harmennszon van Rijn, B, AVan Paassen, Pierre, Days of Our Years (a view of the Pre-war

European situation), B, SSVan Paassen, Pierre, That Day Alone, SSVerneuil, Louis, The Fabulous Life of Sarah Bernhardt, B, AVestal, Stanley, Kit Carson: Happy Warrior of the Old West, BVillard, O. G., Fighting Years: Memoirs of a Liberal Editor, B, SSWagenknecht, Edward C, Jenny Lind, B, AWalden, Arthur T., Dog Puncher on the Yukon, TWalker, Charles, American City; A Rank and File History (Minne-

apolis), SSWallace, Henry A., The Century of the Common Man, E SSWain, Nora, The House of Exile (upper class Chinese life), T, SSWain, Nora, Reaching for the Stars (Nazi pre-war German}), T, SSWalton, Isaak, The Complete Angler, EWard, Henshaw, Charles Darvcin, the Man and His Warfare, B, S

Ward, Henshaw, Exploring the Universe, S

Ward, Maisie, G. K. Chesterton, BWebb, Sidney and Beatrice, The Truth about Soviet Russia, SS

Weinstock, Herbert, Tschaikoivsky, B, AWensley, Frederick P., Forty Years of Scotland Yard: the Record of

a Lifetime of Service in the Criminal Investigation Department, BWerner, M, R., Barnum (genius of the circus), BWhibley, Charles, A Book of Scoundrels, BWhitaker, C. H., Rameses to Rockefeller (informal history of archi-

tecture), AWhite, E. B., Quo I'adimus ; or The Case for the Bicycle, EWhite, Margaret Bourke, Shooting the Russian JFar, T, SSWhite, William L., They Were Expendable, SSWillkie, Wendell, One World, SSWilson, Forrest, Crusader in Crinoline (author of Uncle Tom's

Cabin), BWilson, J. Dover, The Essential Shakespeare; a Biographical Ad-

venture, B

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Wissler, Clark, Indians of the United States, S

Wolfe, Thomas, Letters to His Mother, B, EWoodbury, D. O., The Glass Giant of Palo mar, S

Woodbury, D. O., JFhat the Citizen Should Knoza about SubmarineJFarfare, S

Woolf, Virginia, Flush (Elizabeth Barrett's dog), BWoolley, Charles L., Digging up the Past, S

Wright, Frank Lloyd, An Autobiography (modern American archi-

tect), B, AWright, Frank T., The Disappearing City, SS, AWright, Richard, 12,000,000 Black Voices, SSYbarra, Thomas, America Faces South, T, SSYbarra, Thomas, Young Man of Caracas, BYbarra, Thomas, Young Man of the World, BYoung, Arthur H., Art Young, His Life and Times (great cartoonist,

humanitarian and socialist), B, SSYoung, James R., Behind the Rising Sun (Japan), T, SSZilboorg, Gregory, Mind, Medicine, and Man, S

Zim, H. S., Parachutes, S

Zinsser, Hans, As I Remember Him (a doctor), B, S, SSZinsser, Hans, Rats, Lice and History S, SS

PROSE FICTION

Allen, Herve}-, The Forest and the FortAtherton, Gertrude, The ConquerorAusten, Jane, EmmaAusten, Jane, Pride and PrejudiceAusten, Jane, Sense and. Sensibility

Baker, Dorothy, Young Man 'ivith a Horn (a jazz artist)

Balzac, Honore de, Eugenie GrandetBalzac, Honore de. The Magic SkinBarnes, Margaret Ayers, IFithin This Present (about a wealthy Chicago

banking family)Barnes, Margaret Avers, Years of GraceBellaman, Henry, Kings Ro^iv

Benet, Stephen Vincent, The Devil and Daniel Jf'ebster

Bennett, Arnold, Buried AliveBennett, Arnold, ClayhangerBennett, Arnold, The Old JFives' TaleBentlev, Phalli's. Inheritance

Blackmore, R. D., Lorna DooneBlasco, Ibanez, Vicente, Four Horsemen of the ApocalypseBojer, Johan, The Great Hunger (the meaning of life)

Bottome, Phvllis. London PriJr

Boyd, James, Drums (South Carolina just before the AmericanRevolution)

Boyd, James, Marching On (the South during the Civil War)Boyie, Kay, AvalancheBradford, Roark, This Side of JordanBromfield, Louis, The Green Bay TreeBronte, Charlotte, Jane EyreBronte, Emily, Wuthering Heights

62

Buck, Pearl, Dragon SeedBuck, Pearl, East Jt'ind: IFest WindBuck, Pearl, The Good Earth (China)Buck, Pearl, The Patriot (China)Busey, Garreta, The JVindbreak (Champaign County)Butler, Samuel, The JVay of All FleshByrne, Don, Messer Marco PoloCaldwell, Taylor, Tlie Strong City

Caldwell, Taylor, The TurnbullsCannon, Legrand, Look io the Mountain (Colonial New Hampshire)Cantwell, Robert, The Land of Plenty (story of a western lumber mill)

Carroll. Gladvs, As the Earth TurnsCarroll, Lewis (Charles Dodgson), Alice's Adventures in JVonderlandCarroll, Lewis, (Charles Dodgson), Through the Looking GlassCather, Willa S., Death Comes for the ArchbishopCather, Willa S., A Lost Lady (compare with Madame Bovary)Cather, Willa S., My Antonia (Nebraska)Cather, Willa S., O Pioneers!

Cather, Willa S., Sapphira and the Slave Girl (Virginia)

Cather, Willa S., The Song of the LarkCervantes, Miguel de, Do7i Quixote of La ManchaChase, Mary Ellen, Mary Peters

Chase, Mary Ellen, Silas Crockett (four generations of a New Englandfamily)

Churchill, Winston, The Crisis (St. Louis during the Civil War)Churchill, Winston, Richard Carvel (American Revolution)Clemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), Huckleberry FinnClemens, Samuel L., (Mark Twain), The Prince and the PauperCloete, Stuart, Turning JFheels

Coatsworth, Elizabeth, Here I StayCollins, Wilkie, The Moonstone (mystery story)

Conrad, Joseph, Lord JimCooper, James Fenimore, The SpyCozzens, James Gould, The Just and the Unjust (a small town murder

trial)

Crane, Stephen, The Red Badge of CourageCronin, A. J., The Citadel (a study of a young doctor)

Cronin, A. J., The Keys of the KingdomCronin, A. J., Stars Look DoivnDaly, Maureen, Seventeenth SummerDavenport, Marcia, Valley of DecisionDeFoe, Daniel, Moll FlandersDeFoe, Daniel, Robinson CrusoeDickens, Charles, David CopperfieldDickens, Charles, Oliver Tivist

Dickens, Charles, The Pickwick PapersDickens, Charles, The Old Curiosity ShopDobson, Ruth L., Stravu in the JFind (Indiana Amish)Dos Passos, John, Manhattan TransferDos Passos, John, Nineteen-NineteenDos Passos, John, Number OneDos Passos, John, U. S. A.Dostoevski, Feodore, The Brothers Karamazov (a famous novel of

Russian life)

63

Dostoevski, Feodore, Crime and PunishmentDouglas, Norman, South WindDoyle, Sir Arthur Conan, The White CompanyDreiser, Theodore, American TragedyDreiser, Theodore, Jennie GerhardtDumas, Alexandre, The Count of Monte Crista

Dumas, Alexandre, The Three MusketeersDu Maurier, Daphne, Jamaica InnDu Maurier, Daphne, Rebecca *

Duranty, Walter, Search for a KeyEdmonds, Walter D,, The Big BarnEdmonds, Walter D., Chad Hanna (Erie Canal)Edmonds, Walter D., Drums Along the Mohazvk (scene is the Mohawk

Valley from 1776 to 1784)Edmonds, Walter D., Erie Water (concerns the building of the Erie

Canal)Edmonds, Walter D., Rome HaulEliot, George (Mary Ann Evans), The Mill on the Floss

Engstrand, Stuart, They Sought for Paradise (a pioneer colony in

Illinois)

Erlich, Leonard, God's Angry ManFallada, Hans, Little Man, JVhat Noiv? (pre-Nazi Germany)Farrell, James, Father and Son (Chicago Irish)

Farrell, James, My Days of AngerFarrell, James, Studs Lonigan (Chicago Irish)

Fast, Howard, Citizen Tom PaineFast, Howard, The UnvanguishedFedorova, Nina, The Family (Russian refugees in China)Feld, Rose Caroline, Sophie Halenczik, AmericanFerber, Edna, Cimarron (oil fields of Oklahoma)Ferher, Edna, Sho=u; BoatFerber, Edna, So RigField, Rachel, All This and Heaven, TooFielding, Henry, Joseph AndreivsFielding, Henry, Tom JonesFisher, Dorothy Canfield, The Bent TivigFisher, Dorothy Canfield, Seasoned TimberFisher, Vardis, Children of God (the Mormons)Fisher, Vardis, Darkness and the Deep (cave man era)

Flaubert, Gustave, Madame Bovary (a study in character disintegra-

tion)

Foldes, Jolan, Prelude to LoveForbes, Esther, Johnnv TremainForbes, Esther, Paradise (American colonial life)

Forbes, Kathrvn, Mamma's Bank AccountForester, C. S., Captain Horatio Hornbloiver (the British navy)Forster, E. M., A Passage to IndiaFrance, Anatole, The Crime of Sylvestre BonnardFrance, Anatole, Penguin IslandFuller, Tola, Loon FeatherGale, Zona, Birth (story of a small Wisconsin town)Galsworthy, John, The Country HouseGalsworthv, John, Flo-Ji'cring Jf'ilderness

Galsworthy, John, The Forsyte Saga

64

Galsworthy, John, Maid in ll'aiting

Galsworthy, John, The Patrician

Galsworthy, John, The Silver SpoonGalsworthy, John, The IFhiie MonkeyGilligan, Edmund, The Gaunt JTomanGlasgow, Ellen, Barren GroundGlasgow, Ellen, In this Our Life (contemporary Virginia)Gogol, Nikolai, Chichiko'v's JourneysGoldsmith, Oliver, The Vicar of JVakefieldGoodrich, Marcus, Delilah (the American navy)Gordon, Caroline, None Shall Look Back (Civil War story)

Gorki, Maxim, The SpyGoudge, Elizabeth, The Bird in the TreeGoudge, Elizabeth, A City of Bells

Gulbranssen, Trygue, Beyond Sing the WoodsHaedrich, Marcel, Barrack 3, Room 12 (Frenchman in concentration

camp)Hamsun, Knut, Growth of the Soil (pioneer novel, scene in Norway)Hamsun, Knut, HungerHardy, Thomas, Far from the Madding Croiud

Hardy, Thomas, Life and Death of the Mayor of Casterbridge

Hardy, Thomas, The Return of the NativeHardy, Thomas, Tess of the D'UrbervillesHawthorne, Nathaniel, The Blithedale Romance (Brook Farm colony)

Hawthorne, Nathaniel, The House of the Seven GablesHawthorne, Nathaniel, The Scarlet Letter (Puritan New England)Hemingway, Ernest, Farevjell to ArmsHemi.-gway, Ernest, For Whom the Bell Tolls (civil war in Spain)

Hemingway, Ernest, The Sun Also Rises

Hemon, Louis, Maria Chapdelaine; a Tale of the Lake St. John CountryHerbert, Xavier, Capricornia (Australia)

Hergesheimer, Joseph, Balisand (just after the American Revolution)

Hergesheimer, Joseph, Java HeadHergesheimer, Joseph, The Limestone Tree (Kentucky)Hergesheimer, Joseph, The Three Black Pennies (the steel industry in

Pennsylvania)Hernandez, Jose, The Gaucho, Martin Fierro

Hersey, John, A Bell for AdanoHighet, Mrs. Helen, Above SuspicionHilton, James, Goodbye, Mr. ChipsHilton, James, Lost HorizonHilton, James, Random HarvestHobart, Alice Tisdale, Oil for the Lamps of China

Holtby, Winifred, South Riding (life in an English town)

Homer, Story of OdysseusHough, Frank, The Neutral Ground (American Revolution)

Household, Geoffrey, Rogue MaleHowells, William Dean, The Rise of Silas LaphamHudson, W. H., Green MansionsHughes, Thomas, Tom Broivn at OxfordHughes, Thomas, Tom Broivn's School DaysHugo, Victor, The Hunchback of Notre DameHugo, Victor, Les MiserablesHugo, Victor, Toilers of the Sea

65

Huxley, Aldous, Point Counter PointHuxley, Aldous, This Brave Neiv JForld (story of an industrialized

Utopia)

James, Henry, The American (an American encounters Europeanculture)

James, Henry, Daisy MillerJames, Henry, The Portrait of a LadyJohnson, Josephine, Noiu in November (farm life in the Middle West)Johnson, Samuel, Rasselas (the search for happiness)Johnston, Mary, To Have and to Hold (Virginia in colonial days)Kantor, MacKinley, Happy LandKantor, MacKinley, The Voice of Bugle AnnKennedy, Margaret, The Constant NymphKingsley, Charles, JVestvjard Ho!Kipling, Rudyard, Captains CourageousKipling, Rudyard, KimKipling, Rudyard, The Light That FailedKnight, Eric, This above All (World War H)Komroff, Manuel, Coronet (Czarist Russia)Kossak, Zofia, Blessed Are the MeekKrey, Laura, And Tell of Time (Texas in post-Civil War period)

La Farge, Oliver, Laughing Boy (a story of Indian life)

La Fayette, Marie Madelaine Pioche, The Princess of ClevesLagerlof, Selma, The Ring of the Lozuenskolds (Sweden)Lagerlof, Selma, The Story of Gosta Berling (nineteenth-century Swe-

den)Lane, Rose Wilder, Let the Hurricane RoarLarsson, Gosta, The Ordeal of the Falcon (aboard a tramp steamer)Lawrence, D. H., Sons and LoversLewis, Sinclair, Arrovjsmith (story of a physician)

Lewis, Sinclair, Babbitt (satire on American middle-class life)

Lewis, Sinclair, DodsvjorthLewis, Sinclair, It Can't Happen Here (dictatorship in America)Lewis, Sinclair, Main Street

Lin Yutang, Moment in PekingLlewellyn, Richard, Hovj Green Was My Valley (Welsh mining

community)Llewellyn, Richard, None But the Lonely HeartLocke, William J., The Beloved VagabondLondon, Jack, The Sea IVolfLons, H., Harm fVulf (the Thirty Years War, 1618-1648)

Loti, Pierre (Louis Marie Julien Viaud), An Iceland FishermanLytton, Edward, The Last Days of PompeiiMacaulay, Rose, Dangerous Ages (post-war I upheaval)Macaulay, Rose, The Shadovj Flies (a story of seventeenth-century

England)McKay, Alis, They Came to a RiverMcNichol, Chas. L., Crazy WeatherMagdaleno, Mauricio, SunburstMalaquais, Jean, Men from NowhereMalmberg, Bertil, Ake and His World (a childhood in Sweden)Malraux, Andre, Man's Fate (Communist Revolution in China)Malraux, Andre, Man's Hope (Spanish Civil War)Mann, Thomas, Buddenbrooks (a German Forsyte Saga)

66

Mann, Thomas, Joseph and His Brothers

Mann, Thomas, The Magic MountainManzoni, Alessandro, The Bethrothed (adventure in Italy)

Marquand, John P., The Late George Aplcy ; a Novel in the Form ofa Memoir (Boston)

Marquand, John P., H. M. Pulham, Esq. (Harvard alumni)Marquand, John P., So Little TimeMasefield, John, The Bird of DaivningMasefield, John, Sard Marker (an adventure story)

Mason, A. E. W., The Four FeathersMaugham, William Somerset, Aslienden

Maugham, William Somerset, The Moon and SixpenceMaugham, William Somerset, Of Human BondageMaxwell, William, They Came Like Sivalloivs

Melville, Herman, Moby Dick (whale fishing)

Melville, Herman, Typee (in the South Sea Islands)

Meredith, George, The EgoistMeredith, George, The Ordeal of Richard FeverelMerejkowski, Dmitri, The Romance of Leonardo da Vinci

Mitchell, S. Weir, Hugh Wynne (story of the Revolutionary War)Moberg, Vilhelra, The Earth Is OursMoon, Bucklin, The Darker BrotherNathan, Robert, The Enchanted VoyageNathan, Robert, JVinter in AprilNordoff, Charles and Hall, J. N., Men Against the SeaNordoff, Charles and Hall, J. N., Mutiny on the Bounty

Nordoff, Charles and Hall, J. N., Botany BayNorris, Frank, The Octopus (California)

Norway, Nevil Shute, An Old CaptivityNorway, Nevil Shute, Pied PiperO'Hara, Mary, See Sture-Vasa, MaryPage, Elizabeth, The Tree of Liberty (America, 1754-1806)

Parrish, Anne, The Perrenial BachelorPater, Walter, Marius, the Epicurean (life in the time of Marcus

Aurelius)Peterkin, Julia, Scarlet Sister Mary (Negroes of South Carolina)

Philipotts, Eden, The Grey RoomPriestley, J. B., Angel PavementPriestley, J, B., Black-out in Gretley (espionage and counter-espionage)

Priestley, J. B., The Good CompanionsRawlings, Marjorie, The Yearling (Florida)

Reade, Charles, The Cloister and the Hearth (life in the fifteenth

century)Remarque, Erich, All Quiet on the Western Front (the first World

War)Reymont, Wladyslaw, The Peasants (Poland)

Roberts, Elizabeth Madox, The Great Meadow (pioneers in Kentucky)

Roberts, Kenneth, Arundel (story of the American Revolution)

Roberts, Kenneth, Northiuest PassageRoberts, Kenneth, Oliver Wisvjell (the American Revolution from

Tory viewpoint)Robertson, E. Arnot, The Signpost

Rolland, Romain, Jean Christophe (contains: Dawn, Morning, Youth,

Revolt)

67

Rolland, Romain, Jean Christophe in Paris (contains: The MarketPlace, Antoinette, The House) -

Rolland, Romain, Jean Christophe ; Journey's End (contains: Love mand Friendship, The Burning Bush, The New Dawn) 1

Rolvaag, O. E., Giants in the Earth (Norwegian pioneers in the

Dakotas)Rolvaag, O. E., Peder Victorious (sequel to Giants in the Earth)Saint Exupery, Antoine de, Night Flight

Saint Exupery, Antoine de, Southern MailSand, George (pseud.), The Devil's Pool and Francois the WaifSandoz, Mari, Capital City (anti-democratic forces in the Middle

West)Santayana, George, The Last Puritan (a philosophical novel)

Saroyan, William, The Human ComedySavers, Dorothy, Nine Tailors (mystery)

Scott, Sir Walter, The Bride of LammermoorScott, Sir Walter, Guy ManneringScott, Sir Walter, KenilivorthScott, Sir Walter, Old MortalityScott, Sir Walter, Quentin DurivardScott, Sir Walter, The TalismanSedgwick, Anne Douglas, The Little French GirlSeghers, Anna, Seventh Cross (Nazi Germany)Sender, Ramon J., Chronicle of DawnSender, Ramon J., Dark /reddingShaw, George Bernard, An Unsocial Socialist

Shearing, Joseph, The Golden Violet

Shiriaev. Petr, Flattery's FoalSienkiewicz, Henryk, Quo Vadis?Sienkiewicz, Henryk, IVith Fire and SzuordSillanpaa, Emil, Meek Heritage (life in Finland)

Simenon, George, Patience of MaigretSinclair, Upton, Dragon's TeethSinclair, Upton, Wide is the GateSinclair, Upton, JVorld's EndSmith, Betty, A Tree Groivs in BrooklynSmith, Lillian, Strange Fruit

Steinbeck, John, Grapes of WrathSteinbeck, John, The Moon Is DoivnSteinbeck, John, Of Mice and MenSteinbeck, John, Tortilla Flat

Stevenson, Robert Louis, KidnappedStevenson, Robert Louis, The Master of Ballantrae

Stevenson, Robert Louis, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr.Hyde

Stewart, George, StormStone, Grace Zaring, The Bitter Tea of General YenStone, Grace Zaring, Escape (Nazi Germany)Stone, Irving, Lust for Life (Fictionized biography of Van Gogh)Stuart, Jessie, Taps for Private TussleSture-Vasa, Mary, My Friend Flicka

Sudermann, Hermann, Dame CareSwift, Jonathan, Gulliver's TravelsSwinnerton, Frank, Nocturne (the story of one night and five people)

68

Synge, John M., The Aran Islands (travel narrative)

Tarkington, Booth, Alice AdamsThackeray, William Makepeace, Henry EsmondThackeray, William Makepeace, Pendennis (university life and Lon-

don)Thackeray, William Makepeace, Vanity FairTolstoi, Count Leo N., Anna KareninaTolstoi, Count Leo N., ResurrectionTolstoi, Count Leo N., Jf^ar and PeaceTomlinson, H. M., Gallions Reach (London, India, and Malay Penin-

sula)

Travern, Brune, Treasure of the Sierra MadreTrollope, Anthony, Barchester ToiversTrollope, Anthony, Dr. ThomeTrollope, Anthony, The JFardenTucker, Augusta, The Man Miss Susie LovedTucker, Augusta, Miss Susie Slagle's (medical students at Johns

Hopkins)Turgenev, Ivan S., Fathers and SonsTurgenev, Ivan S., Virgin Soil

Undset, Sigrid, The Bridal JVreatJi (life in Medieval Norway)Undset, Sigrid, Tlie Cross (sequel to Bridal JVreath)

Undset, Sigrid, The Mistress of Husaby (sequel to Bridal Wreath)Vance, Ethel, See Stone, Grace ZaringWaddell, Helen, Peter AbelardWalker, Mildred, IFinter IV Iteat

Walpole, Hugh, The Cathedral (struggle for power in a cathedral

town)Walpole, Hugh, Fortitude

Walpole, Hugh, JeremyWassermann, Jakob, The World's Illusion (European society in the

first days of World War I)

Webb, Mary, Precious BaneWells, H. G., Mr. Britling Sees It Through (England in World War I)

Wells, H. G., Tono-BungayWerfel, Franz, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh (Armenian heroism)

Werfel, Franz, Song of BernadetteWeston, Christine, IndigoWharton, Edith, The Age of InnocenceWharton, Edith, Ethan Frame (New England farm life)

Wharton, Edith, False DaiunWharton, Edith, The House of MirthWharton, Edith, Neiv Year's DayWharton, Edith, The Old MaidWharton, Edith, The SparkWhitney, Janet, JenniferWilder, Thornton, The Bridge of San Luis ReyWilson, Margaret, The Able McLaughlins (Middle West)Wolfe, Thomas, Look Homeivard AngelWolfe, Thomas, Of Time and the River

Wolfe, Thomas, You Can't Go Home AgainWolff. Marietta, Nicjht Shift

Wren, Percival, Beau GesteWright, Richard, Native Son (a Negro and society)

69

SHORT STORIES

Anderson, Sherwood, Winesburg, OhioBates, Ralph, Sirocco and Other Stories

Bates, S. C., Tiuentieth Century Stories

Beirce, Ambrose, Tales of Soldiers and Ciz'ilians

Brewster, D., A Book of Contemporary Short Stories

Brewster, D., A Book of Modern Short Stories

Brown, Leonard, Modern Short Stories

Buck, Pearl, Today and Forever (modern China)Burnett, Whit, and Foley, Martha, A Story Anthology, 1931-1933

Burrell, Angus and Cerf, Bennett A., The Bedside Book of FamousAmerican Stories

Cable, G. W., Old Creole DaysCaldwell, Erskine, Kneel to the Rising SunCallaghan, Morley, A Native ArgosyCather, Willa, Youth and the Bright Medusa (stories of artists and

musicians)Chekov, Anton, Stories

Conrad, Joseph, Typhoon and Other Stories

Crane, Stephen. Maqgie and Other Stories

Cross, E. A., The Book of the Short Story (an excellent anthology)Dashiell, A., Editor's ChoiceGalsworthy, John, CaravanGarland, Hamlin, Main-Travelled RoadsHardy, Thomas, IFessex TalesHarte, Bret, Luck of Roaring CampHemingway, Ernest, The Fifth Column and the First 49 Stories

Heming-\vay, Ernest, ed.. Mm at WarKipling, Rudyard, Selected Stories

Lardner, Ring, Round UpLusin, Ah O and OthersMansfield, Katharine, Bliss

Mansfield, Katharine, Garden PartyMaugham, W. Somerset, East and U^rst

Maupassant, Guj' de. The Odd NumberMilburn, George, No More TrumpetsMorley, Christopher, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Jf'atson

New Yorker, Short Stories from the Nevj YorkerO'Brien, Edward J., Tiventy-Five Finest Short Stories

O'Brien, Edward J., The Short Story Case BookO' Flaherty, L., Spring SolvingParker, Dorothy, Laments for the Living (witty and cynical)

Pence, R. W., Short Stories of TodayPoe, Edgar Allan, Selected TalesRawlings, Marjorie, JVhen the JFhippoorivill (Florida tales)

Saroyan, William, My Name Is Aram (unconventional people in

California)

Steele, Wilbur Daniel, Land's End and Other Stories

Steinbeck, John, The Long Valley (in California)

Stephens, James, Etched in MoonlightStevenson, Robert Louis, Nevj Arabian NightsStrong, L. A. G., Don Juan and the WheelbarrowStrong, L. A. G., The English Captain (scene is Scotland, Ireland,

and Devon)

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Struther, Jan, Mrs. Miniver (English)Suckow, Ruth, loiua Interiors

Wharton, Edith, Certain PeopleWharton, Edith, GhostsWharton, Edith, Xingu and Other Stories

Wright, Richard, Uncle Tom's Children

DRAMAAeschylus, AgamemnonAeschylus, Prometheus BoundAnderson, Maxwell, Elizabeth the QueenAnderson, Maxwell, Key LargoAnderson, Maxwell, Mary of ScotlandAnderson, Maxwell, IVinterset

Andreyev, Leonid N., He Who Gets Slapped (circus background)Arent, Arthur, and others, One Third of a Nation (in Federal

Theatre Plays)

Arent, Arthur, and others. Power (in Federal Theatre Plays)Balderston, John Lloyd, and Squire, J. C, Berkeley SquareBarrie, Sir James M., The Admirable CrichtonBarrie, Sir James M., Quality Street (Napoleonic wars)Barrie, Sir James M., IVhat Every JVoman KnovjsBarry, Philip, The Animal KingdomBarr}-, Philip, Here Come the ClovunsBarry, Philip, The Philadelphia StoryBehrman, S. N., No Time for ComedyBehrman, S. N., Rain from HeavenBennett, Arnold, and Knoblock, Edward, MilestonesBesier, Rudolf, The Barretts of JVimpole Street (compare with Flush)

Cerf, Bennett, ed., Sixteen Famous British PlaysChekhov, Anton, The Cherry Orchard (a tragedy of Russian life)

Chekhov, Anton, The Three Sisters (Russian provincial life)

Chekhov, Anton, Uncle Vanya (a study of Russian temperament)

Connelly, Marc, The Green Pastures (Negro)Coward, Noel, Play Parade (collection of seven plays)

Coward, Noel, Tonight at 8:30 (collection of nine one-act plays)

Crothers, Rachel, Susan and GodDayton, Katharine, and Kaufman, George, First LadyDunsany, Lord, T,.e Gods of the Mountain (in Five Plays)

Dunsany, Lord, The Laughter of the Gods (in Plays of Gods and Men)Dunsany, Lord, A Night at an Inn (in Plays of Gods and Men)Dunsany, Lord, The Tents of the Arabs (in Plays of Gods and Men)Eliot, T. S., Family ReunionEliot, T. S., Murder in the CathedralEuripides, Electra (compare wi;h O'Neill's Mourning Becomes Electra)

Euripides, Iphigenia in TaurisEuripides, MedeaFerber, Edna, and Kaufman, George, Stage DoorFerris, Walter, Death Takes a Holiday (Italian fantasy)

France, Anatole, The Man IFho Married a Dumb IVife

Galsworthy, John, Justice (indicting British divorce laws)

Galsworthy, John, The Silver Box (class injustice)

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Galsworthy, John, Strife (industrial strike)

Gassner, John, ed., Tii:enty Best Plays of the Modern AmericanTheatre *

Gilbert, W. S., and Sullivan, Sir Arthur, Complete PlaysGoethe, Johann Wolfgang von, FaustGorky, Maxim, The Lo-iicr Depths (pre-Soviet slums) (in Moscow

Art Theatre Plays)

Gregory, Lady, The Bogie Men (in Ne^ Comedies)Gregory, Lady, Coats (in Neiu Comedies)Gregory, Lady, Damer's Gold (in Nezu Comedies)Gregory Lady, The Full Moon (in Neiv Comedies)Gregory, Lady, The Gaol Gate (in Seven Short Plays)Gregory, Lady, Hyacinth Halvey (in Seven Short Plays)Gregory, Lady, The Jack Daw (in Seven Short Plays)Gregory, Lad}% McDonough's Wife (in AViu Comedies)Gregory, Lady, The Rising of the Moon (in Seven Short Plays)Gregory, Lady, Spreading the Nevus (in Seven Short Plays)Gregory, Lady, The Traveling Man (in Seven Short Plays)Gregory, Lady, The Jl'orkhouse JVard (in Seven Short Plays)Hart, Moss, and Kaufman, George S., You Can't Take It With You

(best comedy of 1937)Hellman, Lillian, The Little FoxesHellman, Lillian, JFatch on the RhineHugo, Victor, Hernani (Spanish historical romance)Ibsen, Henrik, BrandIbsen, Henrik, A Doll's HouseIbsen, Henrik, Hedda GablerIbsen, Henrik, The Master BuilderIbsen, Henrik, Pillars of Society

Ibsen, Henrik, RosmersholmKaufman, George, The American WayKaufman, George, and Connelly, Marc, Beggar on HorsebackKaufman, George, The Man JFho Came to DinnerKaufman, George, and Ferber, Edna, Dinner at EightKaufman, George, and Ryskind, Morris, Of Thee 1 SingKingsiey, Sidney, The Patriots

McKenney, Ruth, My Sister Eileen

MacLeish, Archibald, Air Raid, a Verse Play for RadioMacLeish, Archibald, The Fall of the City; Verse Play for RadioMacLeish, Archibald, Panic, a Play in VerseMillay, Edna St. Vincent, The King's Henchman (opera)

Milne, A. A., Mr. Pirn Passes By (whimsical comedy)Moliere (Jean Baptiste Poquelin), The Doctor in Spite of Himself

(in Plays)

O'Casey, Sean, Juno and the Paycock (Dublin tenements) (in TwoPlays)

O'Casey, Sean, The Plough and the Stars

1

•Contains Anderson's Winterset and High Tor; Sherwood's Idiot's Delight;Green's Johnn:, Johnson; Connelly's Green Pastures; Kaufman and Hart'sYou Can't Take It With You; Behrman's End of Summer; Barry's The AnimalKingdom; Spevvack's Boy Meets Girl; Boothe's The Women; Reed's Yes, MyDarling Daughter; Abbot and Holm's Three Men on a Horse; Hellman's TheChildren's Hour; Kirkland and Caldwell's Tobacco Road; Steinbeck's OfMice and Men; Kingsley's Dead End; Shaw's Bury the Dead; MacLeish'sThe Fall of the City ; Odets' Golden Boy ; and Ferber and Kaufman's Stage Door.

72

O'Casey, Sean, The Shadoiu of a Gunman (Irish independence) (inTiuo Plays)

Odets, Clifford, Six Plays**Odets, Clifford, Waiting for Lefty (in Three Plays)O'Neill, Eugene G., Ah, Wilderness (comedy of adolescence)O'Neill, Eugene G., Anna Christie

O'Neill, Eugene G., Days Without End (modern miracle play)O'Neill, Eugene G., Desire Under the ElmsO'Neill, Eugene G., Dynamo (Is electricity God?)O'Neill, Eugene G., The Emperor Jones (study of fear)O'Neill, Eugene G., The Great God BroiunO'Neill, Eugene G., Lazarus Laughed (at death)O'Neill, Eugene G., Marco Millions (a Renaissance Babbitt)O'Neill, Eugene G., Mourning Becomes Electra (compare with Eu-

ripides' Electra)

O'Neill, Eugene G., Strange InterludePinero, Sir Arthur W., The Second Mrs. TanquerayPinero, Sir Arthur W., Siveet LavenderPirandello, Luigi, As You Desire MePirandello, Luigi, Henry IV (in Three Plays) (insanity motive)Pirandello, Luigi, Right You Are (If You Think So) (in Three Plays)Pirandello, Luigi, Six Characters in Search of an Author (in Three

Plays)

Rice, Elmer, Counsellor-at-laiv

Rice, Elmer, Street SceneRice, Elmer, The Subivay (modernistic tragedy)Rostand, Edmond, L'Aiglon (Napoleon's son)

Rostand, Edmond, Cyrano de Bergerac (soldier-poet)

Saroyan, William, Three Plays*Schiller, Johann Christoph Frederich von, Marie Stuart (Queen of

Scotland)Shaw, George Bernard, Androcles and the Lion (satiric fable)

Shaw, George Bernard, CandidaShaw, George Bernard, Man and SupermanShaw, George Bernard, Pygmalion (in Androcles and the Lion)

Shaw, George Bernard, Saint Joan (compare with MacKaye's Jeanned'Arc)

Shaw, George Bernard, You Never Can Tell

Shaw, Irwin, Bury the DeadShaw, Irwin, The Gentle PeopleSheridan, Richard Brinsley, The RivalsSheridan, Richard Brinsley, The School for ScandalSherriff, Robert Cedric, Journey's End (World War I)

Sherwood, Robert, Abe Lincoln in Illinois

Sherwood, Robert, The Petrified Forest

Sherwood, Robert, Idiots' DelightSherwood, Robert, Reunion in ViennaSherwood, Robert, There Shall Be No NightSophocles, AntigoneSophocles, Oedipus

••Contains Awake and Sing, Waiting for Lefty, Till the Day I Die, Paradise

Lost, Golden Boy, Rocket to the Moon.•Contains My Heart's in the Highlands, Love's Old Sweet Song, and TheTime of Your Life.

73

Synge, John M., The Playboy of the IFestern JVorldSynge, John M., Riders to the SeaS.vnge, John M., The IVel I of the Saints (Irish peasants)

Vane, Sutton, Outiuard BoundWilde, Oscar, The Importance of Being EarnestWilde, Oscar, Lady Windermere's FanWilde, Oscar, A Woman of No Importance\^'ilder, Thornton, The Skin of Our TeethWilder, Thornton, Our Toii^n

Williams, Emlyn, The Corn Is Green

ANTHOLOGIES OF POETRY

Cullen, Countee, Caroling Dusk—An Anthology of Verse by NegroPoets

Fitts, Dudley, Contemporary Latin-American Poetry

Johnson, James W., The Book of American Negro PoetryLandis, Paul, Illini Poetry 1924-1929 (by students and teachers at

this university)

Lomax, John A., Coij::boy Songs and Other Frontier BalladsLomax, John A., Songs of the Cattle Trail

Rittenhouse, Jessie B., The Little Book of Modern VerseSandburg, Carl, The American SongbagUntermeyer, Louis, Modern American PoetryVan Doren, Mark, American Poets, 1620-1929Van Doren, Mark, An Anthology of JVorld Poetry

Poetry by One Author

Aiken, Conrad P., Punch: the Immortal Liar (folk narrative)

Auden, W. H., and MacNeice, Louis, Letters from IcelandBenet, Stephen Vincent, Burning City

Benet, Stephen Vincent, John Broivn's Body (Civil War epic)

Benet. Stephen \incent, JVrstern Star

Benet, Stephen Vincent, Young Adventure (undergraduate verse)

Bogan, Louise, Poems and Neiv PoemsBrooke, Rupert, Collected PoemsBrown, Harry, The Poem of Bunker Hill

Brown, Sterling, Southern Road (from Negro folk songs)

Bynner, Witter, Indian Earth (New Mexico)Carroll, Lewis (Charles Dodgson), Collected Verse (humorous)

Ciardi, John, Homeiuard to AmericaCoffin, Robert P., Ballads of Square-Toed AmericansCoffin, Robert P.. Primer for AmericaCullen, Countee, The Black Christ and Other PoemsCullen, Countee, ColorCullen, Countee, Copper SunDavidson, Donald, Lee in the Mountains and Other PoemsDe La Mare, Walter J., The Listeners and Other PoemsDe La Mare, Walter J., Selected Poems (mostly nature themes)

Denney, Reuel, Connecticut RiverDickinson, Emily, Complete PoemsEliot, T. S., Collected Poems (ironic tales and portraits)

Engle, Paul, Corn (the spirit of the Midwest)

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1

Evans, Abbie, The Bright North (rural Maine)Fearing, Kenneth, Collected PoemsFearing, Kenneth, Dead Reckoning (social protest)

Fletcher, John Gould, Breakers and Granite (U. S. panorama)Frankenberg, Lloyd, The Red KiteFrost, Robert, A Boy's Will (compare with Housman's Shropshire Lad)Frost, Robert, A Further RangeFrost, Robert, Neiu HampshireFrost, Robert, North of BostonFrost, Robert, Selected PoemsGilbert, W. S., The Bab Ballads

Hardy, Thomas, Collected Poems (ironic tales and portraits)

Housman, A. E., Collected PoemsHousman, A. E., A Shropshire Lad (bitter lyrics of youth)

Jeffers, Robinson, Selected Poetry

Johnson, James W., God's Trombones—Seven Negro Sermons in Verse

Johnson, Josephine, Year's EndKipling, Rudyard, Verse (British soldiers and colonists)

Knibbs, Henry Herbert, Saddle Songs and Other VerseLanier, Sidney. Poems (post-Civil War Southern poet)

Lindsay, Vachel, The Chinese Nightingale and Other PoemsLindsay, Vachel, The Congo and Other PoemsLorentz, Pare, The River (the text of a documentary film)

Lowell, Amy, Can Grande's Castle (historical)

Lowell, Amy, Pictures of the Floating World (from Oriental models)

Lowell, Amy, Selected Poems (free-verse experiments)

MacLeish, Archibald, Land of the Free

MacLeish, Archibald, Poems, 1924-1933

McNeil, Louise, Gauley MountainMcKay, Claude, Harlem ShadoivsMasefield, John, The Everlasting Mercy and the Widow in the Bye

Street (narrative verse)

Masefield, John, Reynard the FoxMasefield, John, Salt-Water Poems and Ballads

Masefield, John, Selected PoemsMasters, Edgar Lee, Poems of People

Masters, Edgar Lee, Spoon River Anthology (Illinois epitaphs)

Millay, Edna St. Vincent, The Harp-Weaver and Other PoemsMillay, Edna St. Vincent, Conversation at MidnightMillay, Edna St. Vincent, A Feiv Figs from Thistles

Millay, Edna St. Vincent, The Hart-Weaver and Other Poems

Millay, Edna St. Vincent, Renascence and Other PoemsMillay, Edna St. Vincent, Second AprilMiller, Alice Duer, White Cliffs

Omar, Khavyam, RubaiyatParker, Dorothy, Death and Taxes (flippant and amusing)

Parker, Dorothy, Enough RopeRobinson, Edwin Arlington, Collected PoemsRobinson, Edwin Arlington, Tristram

Sandburg, Carl, Chicago PoemsSandburg, Carl, CornhuskersSandburg, Carl, Good Morning, AmericaSandburg, Carl. The People, YesSandburg, Carl, Slabs of the Sunburnt West

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Sandburg, Carl, Smoke and Steel

Sarrett, Lew, 5/oiy Smoke (Indians and the old West)Sassoon, Siegfried L., Counter-Attack (anti-war)

Stuart, Jesse, Man with a Bull-Tongue Ploiu

Teasdale, Sara, Flame and ShadoivTeasdale, Sara, Love SongsVan Doren, Mark, Collected Poems, 1922-1938Van Doren, Mark, Jonathan Gentry (historical verse-novel)

Wylie, Elinor H., Black Armour (subtle and personal)

VVylie, Elinor H., Nets to Catch the WindYeats, William Butler, Early Poems and Stories (Irish)

Yeats, William Butler, Later PoemsYeats, William Butler, The Toiuer

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NOTES

NOTES

^J''VEMrTY OF ILLIN0I8-URBANA

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