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Word: criticizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...nude bathing in a New Haven, Conn, reservoir. Oliver & Charles Brooks, sons of austere Critic Van Wyck Brooks, were arrested, fined...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jul. 2, 1934 | 7/2/1934 | See Source »

With few exceptions the Canadian Press attacked Lord Bessborough last week. They pointed- out that to earn his keep a governor general has only to attend the functions to which he is invited and keep his temper. Only critic of Lord Bessborough to surfer was a radio announcer known as Uncle Al, who launched into an impassioned defense of Mary Pickford on the Gooderham & Worts whiskey hour...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CANADA: Mary Pickford Show | 6/11/1934 | See Source »

Though Germany has given Thomas Mann only a grudging preeminence, Europe and the U. S. acknowledge him as one of the greatest living writers. Readers of his masterpiece-in-progress will echo the prayer of Critic Gabriele Reuter: "May the guardian angel of great literature sustain Thomas Mann, that he may complete this work as powerfully and beautifully as he has begun...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Great Mann | 6/11/1934 | See Source »

...onlv eggs, vegetables and pennies, but beef-steaks as well. It was a very huge suecess." They will sniff at the mock-heroic episode in which Malcolm Cowley smote a Paris cafe proprietor for Art's sake, thus gathering a two-fisted reputation that later scared bookish Critic Ernest Boyd. Nor will they be moved by his version of the long-drawn-out suicide of Harry Crosby, whom he regards as a symbolic figure. But left-wingers will find much to interest them, much to applaud. To plain readers Exile's Return will seem a well-documented, often...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Lost Generation | 6/4/1934 | See Source »

Long consideration of the U. S. scene has not made Critic Brooks an optimist. He thinks U. S. writers tend to lose their personality. ". . . The American writer, having struck out with his new note, becomes-how often!-progressively less and less himself. The blighted career, the arrested career, the diverted career are, with us, the rule." But he has cold comfort for the pseudo-stoics: "To be, to feel oneself, a 'victim' is in itself not to be an artist, for it is the nature of the artist to live, not in the world of which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Voice of a Critic | 5/28/1934 | See Source »

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