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...stories Turgenev maintains one quality which few writers have ever teen able to match. He never imposes himself on his characters, never plays ricks on them or the reader. It is this tone of creative tact which so impressed two American storytellers, Sherwood Anderson and Ernest Hemingway, when they first looked for literary models. Anderson once called A Sportsman's Notebook "the sweetest thing in all literature."* If he exaggerated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Through Gentle Eyes | 7/17/1950 | See Source »

Last month they shipped three cubic yards of food and suplies down to Lima--including half a mile of rope, 200 vinylite bags, one copy of Sherwood and Taylor's "Calculus," and three cases of needle soup...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mountaineering Club Scales Peru Peak During Summer | 6/12/1950 | See Source »

Playwright-Biographer Robert Emmet (Roosevelt and Hopkins) Sherwood told the New York Times Magazine how he had found, among the newly opened archives of his old friend Franklin Delano Roosevelt, some unpublished correspondence between F.D.R. and the late William Allen White, philosopher-publisher of Emporia, Kans. One of the letters, which had contained a snapshot of F.D.R. in one of his favorite seersucker suits, began "Dear Bill: Here is the seersucker picture, duly inscribed by the sucker to the seer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: People, Apr. 17, 1950 | 4/17/1950 | See Source »

...flaw in Sherwood's plot is that there are two heroines and only one hero. Horace Miller, a young photographer with James G. Bennett's New York Herald in 1885, is the object of affection for both Maisie Dell, a lady-reporter from the Police Gazette, and Miss Liberty herself. By all the traditions of American musical drama, Maisie should be the winner. She waits faithfully in New York while Horace tracks Miss Liberty down in Paris, she talks Bennett into sending money to Horace, she sings "Homework" with tears in her eyes. But somehow the show's namesake wins...

Author: By Edward C. Haley, | Title: THE PLAYGOER | 4/15/1950 | See Source »

...Statue of Liberty came into being is potentially a good one, but the brains behind "Miss Liberty" have worked it out according to a rather dull formula. The show lacks the dramatic and musical sparkle which imprints a great musical in the audience's memory. The Berlin, Hart, Sherwood combine has chosen to use the formula in place of any ingenuity, and the result is mediocrity...

Author: By Edward C. Haley, | Title: THE PLAYGOER | 4/15/1950 | See Source »

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