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...Edna Ferber's So Big continues to be one of the best-selling books in several years, and long after its original publication. Meanwhile, Miss Ferber, in a study, newly acquired, is at work on a new novel of Chicago life. She works as hard every day as the man who stands outside my window now and makes life miserable for me and doubtless for himself with a steam rivetter. She works harder. The period when a novel is being written, for a writer with an artistic conscience, is apparently one of the most difficult things imaginable. Doubts assail, characters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Keats+G525 | 3/2/1925 | See Source »

...believe that it is important that the public recover from the impression that writing is the mere sitting down with white paper before one and turning out a story that sells and sells and sells. After all, the element of luck has not played a large part in Miss Ferber's career. It was not luck that sold her very first story. It was simply that she was a good reporter, who had turned her reportorial experience into fiction by the process of studying the short stories of others. The Homely Heroine, in the collection Buttered Side Down...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Keats+G525 | 3/2/1925 | See Source »

MINICK?Theatrical version of Edna Ferber's short story of the impossibilities of a middle-class father...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: Best Plays: Dec. 8, 1924 | 12/8/1924 | See Source »

...love. Finally there was Louis Bayard, cultured, a little dried up, in whose elegance she finally found comfort. Everywhere she sought-but her tortured, inquiring mind never found the "answers in the back of the book."This novel has been highly received by such critics as Edna Ferber. F. P. A., Heywood Broun, Laurence Stallings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Problems | 11/3/1924 | See Source »

...Edna Ferber originally wrote this chonicle as a short story-Old Man Minick. George S. Kaufman (coauthor of Dulcy, Merton, Beggar on Horseback, etc.) helped her turn it into a play. Between them they very nearly did a masterpiece. The play is amusing, deeply touching in spots, but overshoots the mark by a too tenacious realism. The characters are types rather than individuals. The detail becomes too authentic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: New Plays: Oct. 6, 1924 | 10/6/1924 | See Source »

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