Fifty years of the American novel;

Gardiner, Harold C. 1904-

Fifty years of the American novel; a Christian appraisal, edited by Harold C. Gardiner. - New York : Scribner, 1951. - xiv, 304 p. 22 cm.

A Christian appraisal: the point of it, by H.C. Gardiner. Edith Wharton: values and vulgarity, by A. Fremantle. Theodore Dreiser: Shifting naturalism, by E.J. Frummond. Ellen Glasgow: ironist of manners, by N.E. Monroe. Willa Cather: memory as muse, by F.X. Connolly. Sinclair Leiws: reviver of character, by C.C. Hollis. Joh Phillips Marquand: Martini-age Victorian, by C.A. Brady. F. Scott Fitzgerald: the touch of disaster, by R. Hughes. John Dos Passos: technique vs. sensibility, by H.M. McLuhan. William Faulkner: tragedian of Yonkapatawpha, by E. Sandeen. Ernest Hemingway: the missing third dimension, by M.F. moloney. Thomas Wolfe: a legend of a man's youth in his hunger, by G.s. Sloyan. John Steinbeck: life affirmed and dissolved, by J.S. Kennedy. James T. Farrell: two twilight images, by F. O'Malley. Novelists of the war: a bunch of dispossessed, by R.C. Healey. "Was all for naught?": Robert Penn Warren and new directions in the novel, by N. Joost.

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American fiction--History and criticism.--20th century

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