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Word: tropics (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...that The Mint, in its general mood and in its unsqueamish record of obscenity, belongs with such contemporary records as Louis-Ferdinand Celine's untranslated La Mort A Credit (Death on the Instalment Plan) and Henry Miller's obsessed story of expatriates in Paris, The Tropic of Cancer. In the Library of Congress the two copies of The Mint are kept in the office of the secretary of the Library, mild, good-natured Martin A. Roberts, who permits them to be examined by reputable scholars, writers and critics who can produce convincing documentary evidence of the seriousness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Reviewer's Scoop | 12/14/1936 | See Source »

...driven to increasingly eccentric exploits in their desire to stay off beaten paths and make interesting copy. Net result is that a collection of recent African books is likely to give armchair travelers a vague feeling that both blacks and whites in Africa habitually suffer from a touch of tropic sun, natives indulging in some pretty weird ceremonies, their white observers indulging in carrying-ons no less grotesque. A patient reader who goes through eight current African books will probably emerge with this feeling a certainty and with a strange hatful of ethnological information, native legends, travelers' jokes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Ajricana | 11/2/1936 | See Source »

Author Vandercook plays a detectifiction con-game against an exotic background. A lover of tropic islands (he has visited and written about Haiti, Trinidad, the South Seas), last year he spent three months on Viti Levu, largest of the Fiji Islands. He gives a first-hand picture of its gigantic, fuzzy-haired natives, once cannibals, now peaceable wards of the British Empire; its island-capital, Suva; its still undomesticated rivers, mountains, jungle. Murder in Fiji will cause hardened readers few authentic thrills but should throw them into pleasurable fijits of suspense. After two murders with cannibalistic garnishings, it looks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fijits | 6/15/1936 | See Source »

Frederick Waugh won the 1934 Popular Prize at Pittsburgh with another marine picture called Tropic Sea (TIME, Dec. 17). Still another Waugh seascape entitled Post Meridian took the $500 Palmer Prize for marine painting at last spring's National Academy. In Chicago last month bewildered Mrs. Frank Logan, wife of the Art Institute's honorary president, picked a fourth Waugh seascape as the sort of picture she really liked, in contrast to the sarcastic canvas that had been awarded her $500 prize (TIME, Nov. 18). Artist Waugh, spry at 74, produces about 75 canvases a year. The Grand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Popular Prizeman | 12/16/1935 | See Source »

Last week the U. S. watched two of its distinguished public servants let their hair down and breathe hard in a fierce family squabble over the issue of whether Republican incumbents or Democratic hopefuls should administer 133 sq. mi. of remote tropic islands containing a population, mostly Negro, barely large enough to fill two thirds of the University of West Virginia's football stadium...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TERRITORIES: Fight & Fantasy (Cont'd) | 7/22/1935 | See Source »

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