Nineteen NineteenHoughton Mifflin, 1946 - 545 pages This is the second novel in Dos Passos's trilogy U.S.A. and it carries into World War I the careers of the characters in the first novel, the Forty second parallel, beginning with Joe Williams, the wandering, battered, and hapless sailor. Four new characters are introduced; Dick Savage, an esthetic, idealistic young Harvard man; Eveline Hutchins, bored and seeking new sensations; "Daughter" (Anne Elizabeth Trent), a relief worker; and Ben Compton, a young Jewish anarchist. The grim stories of their lives are interspersed with passages of "the Newsreel," "the Camera Eye," and short, sardonic biographical sketches, all lending historical background and social dimension to the narrative episodes, as they did in the first novel. |
Contents
The Camera Eye 28 when the telegram came that she | 8 |
JOE WILLIAMS | 15 |
RICHARD ELLSWORTH SAVAGE | 82 |
Copyright | |
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afternoon American Anne Elizabeth asked began blue boat boys café cognac cold Colonel crowd damn dark Daughter Dick Don Stevens door drank drink Eleanor Eveline everything face feel fellow felt Freddy French funny Genoa girl glass goddam gotten gray hair hand he'd head hell Hutchins J. P. Morgan kissed knew laughed League of Nations limey looked Mademoiselle from Armentières Miss Moorehouse morning never Newsreel night Paris Paul Paul Johnson peace pretty Red Cross Sally Emerson Sam Browne belt ship shook sick sitting sleep smell smile sore started Steve Warner streets suddenly talking taxicab tell thing thought told took town train turned uniform voice waiting walked wanted Wesley Everest who'd Wilson window wine woman yelled young