The Literary Review TH of the New York Evening Post Edited by Henry Seidel Canby HE LITERARY REVIEW is a weekly survey of the whole field of literature. Its critical essays and signed reviews are written by the men best qualified, each in his own field, to interpret and to inform. The classified list of new books is perhaps the most complete and most reliable survey now being published in America. The foreign notes keep pace with literature abroad. The Literary Review Editorial unites in genial form the literary essay, with its distinguished phrases and documented citations, and the impersonal editorial. Just as two forms have been united to make a new one, so in nearly all the editorials, new books, new tendencies, have been discussed against a background of the old. Upon the literature of today is focussed taste, scholarship, and wide reading. The result is a new critical form, flexible and competent to inform the reader of the tendencies and implications that lie back of the book he reads. Kenelm Digby, like other noted columnists, bids fair to outstrip in fame the pages that gave him birth. His comments on books and writers are widely quoted, and often give rise to that most venerable of conventions—the literary controversy. In a sense he sets the pace in The Literary Review; for its writers, while competent critics, know how to keep the dust and cobwebs out of what they write. The Literary Review, a supplement to the New York The statement that The Literary Review is extremely good Of course I know The Literary Review of the New York THE LITERARY REVIEW, 20 Vesey Street, New York -Dorothy Canfield Fisher. For the enclosed $2.50 send The Literary Review for one year. Name..... Address O. 6-22-21 Your enjoyment of your vacation depends largely on what you take along to read. Here is a plan that will enable you, without spending a dollar, to provide yourself with enough good books to see you through your vacation regardless of whether you are figuring on only the traditional two weeks or on a trip to Europe. By special arrangement with Boni & Liveright, publishers of the Modern Library, we are able to give you free any volume in this unusual list of interesting books for each new subscription for six months to The Outlook that you send us with remittance of $2.50, the regular six months' subscription rate. For each new subscription of six months that you secure you are entitled, in compensation for your work, to any book in the adjoining list. With but slight effort among your friends you should be able to secure enough subscriptions in the next few weeks to provide yourself with eight or ten volumes. They are excellently printed, bound in croft leather, and stamped in gold. In cases of translations, they are the work of eminent translators. Most of these volumes include introductions by distinguished critics. You need not be a subscriber to The Outlook in order to take advantage of this special offer. In sending your subscriptions, please state what volumes you want. BEST AMERICAN HUMOROUS BUTLER, SAMUEL The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard The Mikado, The Pirates of Penzance, Iolanth GISSING, GEORGE The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft The Mayor of Casterbridge (1) A Doll's House, Ghosts, and An Enemy of the People JAMES, HENRY Daisy Miller and An International Episode MEREDITH, GEORGE STEVENSON, ROBERT LOUIS TOLSTOY, LEO (1) Redemption and Two Other Plays (2) The Death of Ivan Ilyitch and Four Other Stories TURGENEV, IVAN (1) Fathers and Sons (1) The War in the Air The Outlook Company 381 Fourth Avenue New York City THE OUTLOOK. June 29, 1921. Volume 128, Number 9. Published weekly by the Outlook Company at 381 Fourth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Subscription price $5.00 a year. Entered as second-class matter, July 21, 1893, at the Post Office at New York, under the Act of March 3, 1879 |