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...DAUGHTER (439 pp.)-John P. Marquand-Little, Brown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: So Little to Say | 11/11/1946 | See Source »

Shortly before Pearl Harbor, Pulitzer Prize Novelist John P. Marquand remarked: "These are hard times for a writer to find anything to write about because the world is changing so fast that any contemporary subject is likely to be outdated by the time it is published." That didn't prevent him from writing the best-selling So Little Time. Nor does it now keep him from using the very confusions induced by a fast-changing world as the theme of his new novel, B.F.'s Daughter. It might well have been called So Little...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: So Little to Say | 11/11/1946 | See Source »

...Burton Fulton, Polly's self-made father who zoomed from small-town hardware dealer to bigtime industrialist. He is Polly's hero and apparently Marquand's as well. B.F. is kindly, practical, knows how to get along with people and make money. His thinking never goes deeper than: "Any boy has a chance in America if he only sees the picture ... if he only sees the picture." He never does understand why Polly should want to ditch the Yale-bred, well-to-do childhood sweetheart she is engaged to and marry dimeless, academic New Dealer Tom Brett...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: So Little to Say | 11/11/1946 | See Source »

...brilliantly erratic liberal, and his fellows that Novelist Marquand saves his none-too-gentle satire. "The truth was that all liberals were turning into self-righteous, complacent social snobs, and each faction was the only one that understood America." Much later, when Tom has walked out on Polly to sleep with his secretary, she sees him and his crowd clearly: "All at once enthusiasms and loyalties and beliefs became very tiresome. The intelligentsia, the bright planners, working on those streamlined blueprints for the brave new world, were always repeating themselves. . . . There was something mechanical about Tom and all those boys...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: So Little to Say | 11/11/1946 | See Source »

...Novelist Marquand never pins down the confusions that wreck rich Polly Fulton's marriage. Late in the book he tries: "The war had hardly touched them physically. So what was it within themselves that had vanished? It was fantastic to believe that all that two people had shared . . . could be turned and twisted, blown to nothing by a war." How the war had done it or why is hardly clearer to the reader than it is to Polly. One suspects that it is not too clear to Mr. Marquand either. B.F.'s Daughter, an unsatisfying novel, has none...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: So Little to Say | 11/11/1946 | See Source »

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