Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1946 — Page 14
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[A Regular Weekly Feature of The Times) y THE FIRST READER ...By Harry Hansen
Five New Books on Horses Prove They're Important Still in Automobile Age
By HARRY HANSEN Although every sound that enters my office window gives evidence of the automotive age, the mailman has just brought five new books about horses. Therefore horses must mean something to many readers. Top billing, ‘because of its news value, goes to “Whirlaway : The Story of a Racehorse,” by Bert Clark Thayer. (Duell, Sloan & Pearce, $2.50.) Asmat This book tells as much as anyone can write about a
racehorse and gets its principal appeal from excellent photographs. by Elizabeth Ryder Montgomery, inIt contains the first photograph terests children in celebrated books
1 have ever seen of a horse lying by way of anecdotes ' about their
[patriotic stories, humor and fantasy are represented. (John C. Winston Co., $2) “The Story Behind Great Books,
down in the hay with its groom authors. Thus the reader gets at|
for “a well-deserved nap.” For the personality behind the book. horses get tired, too, even exhausted, |I do not know how well children
| |
|
JAMAICA JOURNEY—
Miss Dunham Finds Folk
Dance Porilad
"KATHERINE DUNHAM'S JOURNEY TO ACCOMPONG." By Katherine Dunham. Introduction by Ralph Linton. Drawings by Ted Cook. New York, Holt, $2.50
TOO BAD Katherine Dunham's! non-technical, diary-like record of an anthropological field trip was not available prior to her appearance at English’s last October. The book would have made somewhat clearer what Miss Dunham, her fellow-dancers and her remarkable “rhythm section” were at-| tempting to do. It is the story of part of the year | and a half Miss Dunham spent in! the West Indies on fellowships from
the Rosenwald foundation gathering material on curious survivals of African culture. Her investigations| mastery over light and shade also. served a dual purpose: They gave ‘oo her subjects for scientific mono- |
table” “Bal Negre.”
as Whirlaway was after the Arlington handicap race in Chicago in| which he {inished second. Whirlaway was retired to the] Blue Grass country in August, 1943, but his son, Dark Loveliness, has |
{Hugh Lofting, [Twain and the rest,
know Mary Mapes Dodge. Charles 'Dodgson and his little friend Alice, Cervantes, Mark but surely
{after reading this they will con-
nect them with the stories they
some important engagements at “rote. (McBride, $2. Belmont, Pimlico and Churchill! a .n_ 9 | Downs in 1947, “RANDOLPH CALDECOTT: An
=» ”
“Be a Better Horseman,” by Capt. Appreciation” by Mary Gould Vladimir S. Littauer, is a 250-page Davis, This book, about ‘the life| manual by a well-known instructor, of the famous illustrator of chil-| and here again we meet Bert Clark dren's books, should interest older Thayer, who provides the action children and teachers. Mr. Caldephotographs. The lessons are €x- cott lived from 1846 to 1886 and plicit, often in dialog form, and the Caldecott medal was established should be immensely useful. (Duell, by Frederic Melcher in his honor.
Sloan & Pearce, Essential Books, Miss Davis’ of his sketches.
$7.50) | “The Horseman's Encyclopedia,” |
book reproduces some (Lippincott, $1.75.) | Appealing to children who love |
by Margaret Cabell Self, is a num- music and possibly find practicing |
"FLIGHT INTO EGYPT"—Albrecht
Duerer's wood engraving, dated 1502, first published in 1511 in Duerer's "Life of the Holy
Virgin." This and other examples of the Nuernberg master's genius are included in Herron Art museum's current exhibit, "The Christ mas Theme in Prints," to remain on view, through Jan. 5.
Quality As Gift Books Come Back
|
By HENRY BUTLER, Times Book Reporter | Gift books are back. Gone are the wartime-shortage volumes, small in size and printed on! paper the color of rye bread.
Quality is up, and so are prices in the book trade's return to some- of what we call civilization.
thing like normal output.
and Prices Are Up a co escaped from slavery and for
» ACCOMPONG is an isolated, upland community on the island of Jamaica. Difficult of access (steep, rocky or muddy trails, no roads), the remote area is inhabited by | descendants of rugged characters
a couple of centuries defied British dominance. = These sturdy ‘Maroons,” formerly even sturdier, number among their remote an-
| cestors some of the most warlike
tribes of Africa. Even as isolated as they are, they are nevertheless subject to the grad{ually standardizing encroachments Miss {Dunham found they were fascinated
Forethe first time in several years, handsomely illustrated volumes, | by recordings of Cab Calloway and
Benny Goodmay she played on her |
TITIAN DUCHESS—Eleancra Gon
of Urbino, a portrait in which Titian, master of color,
amon us wells etc wer First American Biography
Of Titian Published Here
LAL bey -
PATRIPIRAS RTS SATURDAY, DEC. 14, 1946 8 (CREEDLESS FAITH— Unitarian Liberalism : Is Defined
"TOGETHER WE ADVANCE." Edited by Stephen H. Fritch-
NAL
* man. Photographic illustrations. Boston, The Beacon Press. $2.
By LOUISE FLETCHER Dr. E. Burdette Backus, pastor of All Souls Unitarian church here, is represented in the list of writers contributing to “Together We Advance,” recently published by the Beacon Press. The book, to which 15 authors contributed, is an exposition of religlous liberalism as it appears in the Unitarian movement. In the chapter wrtten bv Dr. { Backus, “These Things We Believe,” he discusses the diversity of re- : ligious convictions within the Unizaga della Rovere, Duchess tarian church—the church whose shows his creed is, in“the words of A. Powell . | Davies, “not to have a creed.” | Rather than a history of Uni|tarianism, the new book is the story {of persons in Asia, Europe and [North America whose liberal faith is expressed in their character and
" un
ge v
work,
One of the chapters is by Pierre
"TITIAN THE MAGNIFICENT AND THE VENICE OF HIS DAY," Van Paassen, correspondent and
By Arthur Stanley Riggs. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, $5. ; By SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS
author, who, last January, was ordained a Unitarian minister. “Together We Advance” is an ex-
| TITIAN VECELLIO lived 99 years. For 80 of those years, he painted | cellent handbook for those persons Many of his pictures which have who believe that religion should be come down to us are great artistic treasures; some rank with the world’s an humanitarian force “expressing
approximately one picture a month,
greatest masterpieces.
itself in helping to create a new
Four Italian artists of the first half of the sixteenth century stand world.”
head and shoulders . above their -
contemporaries. i Raphael Sanzio painted pictures | never equaled before or since for charm and composition. Michelangelo Buonarroti was the all-time master’ of the human form. Leonardo da Vinci was the intellectualist painter. Titian Vecellio was the master of color,
oer
ber in the Sportsman's library of bit tedious is Gladys Burch's fine fine bindings and boxed sets are ~
A. S Barnes & Co. (85) It uses book, “Famous Violinists for Young the alphabetical order to give defi- People,” which describes violin mak- |
nitions of terms and instructive nou materials. Useful for riders and artists, including Joachim, Wieniowners of stables. {awski, Sarasate, Kreisler, Spalding
and others. (A, S. Barnes, $2.) yw
A picture on the cover that in“CALL ME HORSE,” prepared by | ites you into the book is Fritz! Tom H. Underwood and John I.igredel's man-of-war for Opal] Day, is a collection of anecdotes and | ywpeeler's “H. M. S. Pinafore,” | talks about interesting subjects as-|yunich contains a story and the sociated with horses, originally sent |, j,¢inal songs arranged for chilout by the Thoroughbred Racing
dren's use, the first of the adaptaAssn, with the . co-operation of ting from Gilbert and Sullivan (Coward-McCann,
planned by the author. More rollicking pictures inside, too. (E.P. Dutton & Co., $3.)
$2) Finally we welcome a new printIng of “Horses and Americans,” by Phil Strong, with a frontispiece in color and 103 illustrations, the story | of the horse in history, as well as {ts present uses in the United] Btates, (Garden City Publishing Co., $198.) ' Eleven famous songs. from operas | by Gilbert and Sullivan, including “We Sail the Ocean Blue,” from Pinafore; “None Shall Part Us”| from lolanthe; “A Wandering Min- | uly from Mikado; “When a M Maiden Marries,” from The Gondoliers and other favorites, are available in “Gilbert and Sullivan Songs for Young People,” selected and arranged by Margaret Bush,’ with introduction by J. R. de la Torre Bueno Jr. and illustrated by Erna M. Karolyl. (Whittlesey House,
|
“Story Parade Treasure Book,” introduced by Phyllis Fenner, ought to keep youngsters who like to read ‘stories interested. Animal tales,
a
TIMES SERIALIST — Jeannette Covert Nolan, Indianapolis writer, whose novel, "Gath. er Ye Rosebuds,” published last April, will be re-printed as a serial “in The Times beginning next Wednesday. concerns small-town life in Indiana back in 1910,
The novel
ily
ROEBUCK AND CO
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Indiana’s Most Popular of 25-cent reprints of popular mys- | tery and adventure novels.
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A PLAN FOR WORLD PEACE
HERE IT 1S — A SIMPLE, WORKABLE PLAN FOR WORLD PEACE. A plan you can tie to with all your zeal and determination. YES, this plan outlines a safe and sane road to “PEACE AMONG MEN.” A practical plan by which you and your neighbor and your children can work side by side for the achievement of this peace that men of all nations have fought and died for. You can work for PEACE in.an intelligent and effec tive way, through the understandable WORLD PEACE PLAN, outlined By this Montana author,
throws upon the ugly shadows of international discord. After reading this remarkable book, you and your neighbors will start to work in a definite way to help work out a permanent WORLD PEACE.
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workable plan NOW. Send your friends and neighbors a copy. Start now to put this remarkable plan into action, If your.dealer does riot |
available in quantity. But gift-|ed volumes cover a variety of fields. | book buyers this year will look: in | “Honore Daumier” contains 240 re- |
say, 1933) or the oldtime low prices lithographs (Reynal & Hitchcock, | $
in familiar reprint series. { ™ ). Bhisiged | "Look , e -much-publicized “ at Seller's Market ; { America,” by the editors of Look, | Temporarily, it's a seller's mar- is having a big sale, according to ket for the publishers and ye-i1oca) dealers (Houghton, $12.50). tailers, but byyers will be cheered] by finding some beautiful items. |«pjrst Reader” column today, books | Among interesting volumes to'ghout horses are numerous and | reach The Times Book Page are popular, One de-luxe item he some publications of the Hyperion| qoesn't mention is Edwin Megar- | Press (Paris and London), now dis-|gee's “Horses,” the first printing of | tributed by Crown Publishing Co.|whjch contains in each volume a| “France Lives,” a pictorial and gigoned plate (Messner, $10). i critical panorama of French cul-
As Harry Hansen observes in his |
I d Stefan Lorant’s “The New World,” | ture and art since the war, depiclst, yoiyme of the first pictures drawn |
ivi i ithe half-forgotten “Koromantee” itv hos ie in SI ORO Sey rn Sr Ses So Se ek ast 8 | America, is attracting favorable at-| community taboos against reviving | : nz
painting, drawing, ceramics, cinema, theater and other artistic flelds. With luxurious advertising and] a» {sometimes too literally-transiated | vo RA ES of Ieumerdo da) Gallic prose, the 10'2x14'; paper-| ’ g + BL you { bound volume is something every-| {body here in the office has wanted! to thumb through ($5). Pocket Books 32 Color Plates t] * . ! | Another Hyperion item, “The Lists Reprints {
Btchings of the French Impression-| 8 ists and Their Contemporaries,” by] ) x NEW feprive Hlles are fee; | Edward T. Chase, contains more | cluded among the latest pocket| than 70 reproductions, some in col- books received by The Times Book * | Page. same | “The
Reynal has produced - a - three-
Still another from the Stephen Vincent Benet
plates from drawings by Arlette |introduction by Robert Van Gelder, |
Davids (mostly tulips, hyacinths, | contains Benet's most famous stories etc.) with an introdfiction hy Prin- and poems. cess Bibesco. Easily detachable from | “The Pocket Atlantic” is a col-| their spiral binding, the gay prints;lection of 27 outstanding stories) are suitable for framing ($6.50), |and articles from. the Atlantic
Hyperion also offers a series of Monthly, with an introduction by |
{portfolios like the one by Edwin Edward Weeks. {Alden Jewell of Van Gogh ($5).
Other additions to the 25-cent | reprint series include “The Peter
A melancholy but beautifully il- [Arno Pocket Book,” 127 of Mr, |lustrated book is “Lost Treasures! Arno’s cartoons; Emile Zola's lof Europe,” edited’ by Henry La-| Nana.’ unabridged; Emerson | Farge, giving 427 photos of archi | Hough's “The Covered Wagon,” and \tectural monuments, sacred and| Death on the Aisle” a Mr. and secular, irretrievably lost in the MTS. North mystery by Frances and
war (Pantheon, $5). j Richard Lockridge. In Oxford's Phaidon edition are! :
a series of art volumes: Goya, $3.50, Book Club Makes | Holbein's Windsor drawings, $6.50; | : Bellini, $6.50; Donatello, $5.50, ana | Double Selection | others. | Eric Hodgins’ novel, “Mr. BlandHarper's has a volume of religious (ings Builds His Dream House,” to {interest, “Christ and the Fine Arts,” be published by Simon & Schuster with illustrations and descriptions Dec. 30, is part of the Book-of-the-of artistic treatments of the Christ | Month club's’ dual :seledbion for
Melancholy Book
® FICTION ® TRAVEL of jade in|theme. By Cynthia” Pearl Maus, January. i Chinese mountains d “Murder former Irvington resident, the vol-| The other book in that selection ® NON-FICTION * BIBLES 3 Ane “Murcer ’ : ” in Mesopotamia,” by Agatha Chris-| "Me retails at $4.35. lis “The Angelic Avengers,” by Pierre ® CHILDREN'S * COOK fe. Hereule Folroi Cr 15° Some of the more costly illustrat- | Andrezel. ® REFERENCES ® SHOP ’ ystery In 8) — eee ee re ee eee
jand lyrics you hear on jukeboxes.
| tention (Duell, Sloan & Pearce, $20). the ancient dithyrambic routines.
portable phonograph, and she pre- |
) : rath dicts the ultimate extinction of rater
a a 8 IT IS THEREFORE
ling and gives stories about famous vain for inter-war bargains (as of, Productions of the great satirist's [folk songs, folk stories and folk [Strange thdt a publisher should un-
dances as the younger people are dertake to publish a biography of culturally seduced by radio and Titian with: only two color plates |
movies, ! { ® lincluded, and these not of the mas- |
er’s best work. Yet the book is of great im-| portance to art-lovers for the fact | Indies, of course. It goes on even |inat it is the first biography of | in the United States, where lin- | mitian published by an American guistics professors eagerly record any the first in English since the | hillbilly crones’ versions of 17th-|g ct world war. century ballads, while hillbilly | a 2 a youngsters go for the cheap, cul- | MR. RIGG'S Titian Is a good turally degenerate mountain tunes businessman of conservative moral | \behavior, devoted to his wife and see | his children, faithful to his friends
” ” » t THAT LAMENTABLE cultural | process is not confined to the West
Miss Dunham wanted to
| HE SHOWS Titian as admirably, She also had some experience with unservile to the Emperer Charles V
| volume, boxed edition of the “Note-|“Obi,” or the black magic surrepti- land other powerful men whom he tiously practiced under severe pen- painted and as almost inconceivably alties of British law. Being a scien- | painstaking in
the finish of his tist as well as a sensitive and enter- paintings. He generalizes ably that taining writer, however, Miss Dun- |Titian's portraits of men are full of |
ham spares her readers the kind of |the elements of character which|
necromantic fantasia the late Wil-|characterized the subjects, while his Liam Seabrook popularized «dn his | portraits of women are only skinHaiti writings. |deep. Titian’s women have equisite-
vy.» {ly transparent flesh, but they have
o THE “JOURNEY,” is more than no souls. His men reveal the in-| a day-by-day account of experiences |nermost secrets of their souls to (
and observations. It is also indi- | posterity,
It's the discussions, such as kind of book you might expect from {problem of where Titian got his a person so dynamic as Miss Dun- {reds. He has written a book which ham is on the stage. [is not great, but one which will Printed in sepia ink on cream-|raeasurably add to the layman's colored paper, handsomely decorated {understanding of one of the richest and illustrated, the book is unusual- |artistic lives the world has ever ly attractive.—H. B. known.
-MARY O'HARA “once again shows her mastery“*
Green Grass of Wyoming
“As wholesome and honest as new bread. The story moves along with mounting suspense
to a dramatic climax, It is a rewarding book, beautifully written... will be read and loved
By the author of MY FRIEND, FLICKA and THUNDERHEAD
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UR =P amy 350,000 COPIES I 1 ot RR A reories 800K Cus A 1 eS \ ORR Z\ 14 SELECTION PY UIANG = LIPPINCOTT
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For all of Ernie's friends
| A WARM, PERSONAL | PICTURE RECORD
nie fof
INDIAN, To
TE Shimmy - Hk LEEG Mit gg
An informal picture biography of America's beloved correspondent. From boyhood days
own books. Over 300 pictures, 160 pages, ¢ 12,000 words of (text. $3.00
have his supply of ‘‘GoobD!| : . : it i gather joy NEIGHBOR, send your order! Please send me postpaid the items checked above. I am en and satisfaction to yourself as you direct to us $2.00 per copy } : . $a » post- BosIIE $.evvsiriiriiriii; yi h ; light of understanding it paid. o . :3 = tun payment . - . : o : NAG. .oovuvarvarrsrsirsasinesus. Address ....... Crarsrene eres GOOD NEIGHBOR PUBLISHING CO., INC. 5. Ls Rio ; ra | Y serarsssnnessasnsnsnssnese., Blate...... PaRMis ase aes Riana MONTANA 4 ~ Ss
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{rectly a portrait of a highly intelli- | Mr. Riggs has avoided technical]
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|
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