Monday, Feb. 27, 1950

RECENT & READABLE

Top of the World, by Hans Ruesch.

A sketchy but fresh-faced novel about Eskimo life in the Canadian Arctic, in which the Eskimos get along just fine with their folkways until the white men barge in (TIME, Feb. 20).

Paterson, Book III, by William Carlos Williams. The third volume of a virile, jumpy, often erratic four-part poem by a New Jersey pediatrician who versifies between cases (TIME, Feb. 13).

Burmese Days, by George Orwell. Re-issue of a fine early novel by the author of Nineteen Eighty-Four; a sharp, amusing and often exciting story of native intrigue and white men's burdens in a Burmese village (TIME, Feb. 6).

The Horse's Mouth, by Joyce Gary.

That rare thing, a first-rate comic novel; the final volume of a wise, hilarious trilogy about a modern Moll Flanders, an eccen tric country gentleman and a scapegrace painter (TIME, Feb. 6).

Bring Out Your Dead, by J. H. Powell.

Horror and heroism in Philadelphia's yellow-fever plague of 1793 (TIME, Jan. 23).

The God That Failed, by Arthur Koestler, Ignazio Silone, Richard Wright, Andre Gide, Louis Fischer and Stephen Spender. Six disillusioned men tell why they got into and out of Communism (TIME, Jan. 9).

Lincoln Finds a General, by Kenneth Williams. The first two volumes of a four-volume Unionside history of the Civil War, a work that tops anything yet done in its field (TIME, Jan. 2).

The Strange Life of Charles Waterton, by Richard Aldington. A fascinating study of a 19th Century Englishman whose passion for exploration and taxidermy was equaled by his antipathy for Protestants and Hanoverians (TIME, Dec. 12).

The Sheltering Sky, by Paul Bowles.

U.S. intellectuals on the skids in North Africa; sex and desert atmosphere in an inconclusive but well-written first novel (TIME, Dec. 5).

The Struggle for Guadalcanal, by Samuel Eliot Morison. Volume V of Morison's fine, lively history of the U.S. Navy in World War II, a rare combination of excitement and scholarship (TIME, Nov. 28).

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