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...SHEEAN has written one of the most important books in post-war journalism. Commencing with remarkably incisive comments on his career in Chicago University, and concluding with his flight from Russia and Communism, he holds his reader fascinated; treating him the while to a display of such intellectual honesty as does one's soul good in these jingoistic, nationalistic, patriotic days...

Author: By H. V. P., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 3/23/1935 | See Source »

More through circumstance than anything else, Mr. Sheean early acquired a reputation as a dare-devil newshawk, in the best Floyd Gibbons manner. He was in Morocco during the uprisings of the 1920's, and managed several times to slip through the frontier between the French and the native troops. He had escapades in Spain which gave him an insight into the Rivera revolution. While a correspondent in Paris, he observed Poincare at close range; the only mental conception he retained was one of contempt. He was in Geneva when the ill-fated Protocol was introduced; his cynicism regarding...

Author: By H. V. P., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 3/23/1935 | See Source »

Most significant of all Mr. Sheean's descriptions and comments are those on the Kuomintang, and the attempted Communist Revolutions in China between 1927 and 1930. The figure of Borodin looms large as the greatest man, to Sheean's mind, in the whole decade, Lenin excepted. Then there are Mme. Sun-Yat-Sen, widow of the Chinese hero, Eugene Chen, and the fiery, red-haired Rayna Prohme, all of whom Sheean knew with varying degrees of intimacy. Their failure to put through the revolution Sheean ascribes to the strength of foreign imperialism, British and American in particular...

Author: By H. V. P., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 3/23/1935 | See Source »

...Personal History" should be read by anyone desiring an objective picture of the post-war decade, with its cant, its hypocrisy, its lack of any workable standard, its deification of Mammon, and its half-hearted efforts to achieve peace. The picture is doubly effective when drawn with Mr. Sheean's clarity, and thrown into bold relief by his painstaking and often courageous search for truth...

Author: By H. V. P., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 3/23/1935 | See Source »

Contact with the "ideas" behind the Chinese Revolution made Sheean into a sort of Bruce Lockhart, both onlooker and participant. Unable, in spite of Borodin and Rayna, to make up his mind about Communism, Sheean wavered. But he began to take a hand in the processes of history, attempted to bring T. V. Soong, brother of Madame Sun Yatsen, from Shanghai to Hankow, offered to smuggle Fanny Borodin out of Peking. No longer the impassive newshawk, Sheean, when he covered the Jewish-Arab conflict in the Holy Land, broke down completely, took sides violently, and learned conclusively that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Rambling Reporter | 2/4/1935 | See Source »

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