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...Forster is dead. I miss him and I should not. He died last year, a ninety-year-old man with a ninety-year-old vision--a product of English liberal humanism who believed in the old virtues. Individualism, tolerance, tradition, the Human Spirit, an aristocracy of the good, the Christian ethic with the Christianity left out. If history is to go anywhere, it must leave its Forsters behind. But now Maurice has been published, and Edward Morgan Forster deserves a backward glance...

Author: By Michael Levenson, | Title: A Manly Type of Love | 10/16/1971 | See Source »

...literary journals, the English Review (London, circa 1909) and the Transatlantic Review (Paris, circa 1923). He possessed a rare perception of genius in others. The list of writers Ford published early reads like a mail-order come-on to some 20th century great-writers anthology: Conrad, Galsworthy, Pound, E.M. Forster, Hardy, H.G. Wells, Henry James, Wyndham Lewis, James Joyce, and a chesty 25-year-old American whom Ford enraged by referring to as "young Hemingway." "Hurray!" H.G. Wells once shouted at a dinner for Ford. "Fordie's discovered another genius! Called D.H. Lawrence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: With Love and Squalor | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

Many of the society members society had eliminated many personal values from life. "I don't like technology," M. I. T. student John Forster said, "and this is my way of escaping from...

Author: By Michael S. Feldberg, | Title: Returning to Jousts, Chivalry, and Honor | 3/13/1971 | See Source »

Another novel with a homosexual theme? Ho-hum. But Maurice, announced last week for publication in about a year, is by the late great English novelist E.M. Forster, and so rates as a major literary event. Written in 1913, Forster's sixth novel was withheld by the author of A Passage to India until after his death because, according to his literary executor W.J.H. Sprott, "He thought there would be some stir about it and he did not want to be involved." Forster's own homosexuality is dealt with movingly by his authorized biographer, P.N. Furbank...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Nov. 23, 1970 | 11/23/1970 | See Source »

...change, he thought, unless human nature alters. If, against all odds, that happens, he wrote, "it will be because individuals manage to look at themselves in a new way. Here and there people -a very few people, but a few novelists are among them-are trying to do this." Forster was one of them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Aspects ofjhe Novelist | 6/22/1970 | See Source »

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