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Even so, there was no violence, hardly even a rise in tempers. In Pittsburgh, a judge issued an injunction limiting pickets at Carnegie-Illinois' Homestead plant to ten at each gate. The union protested, but obeyed. In Manhattan, Novelist Elizabeth Janeway (The Walsh Girls) formed a committee to raise funds for G.M. strikers, got $35,000 in three days from a heterogeneous list of contributors who agreed with the slogan "Hunger Must Not 'Be a Weapon." The committee promptly began sending the money out to buy food and pay rents. In New York, the city's Welfare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ADMINISTRATION: Deadlock & Compromise | 2/11/1946 | See Source »

Daisy Kenyan, Elizabeth Janeway's study of a woman's heart skewered by two ardent wooers, went to 20th Century-Fox for $150,000. Said the Retail Bookseller, "Daisy . . . and the men she loves are America...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fiction | 12/17/1945 | See Source »

DAISY KENYON-Elizabeth Janeway -Doubleday, Doran ($2.50). The men & women of today's glossy fiction lead jumpy, exciting lives. They carry out hush-hush Government missions and make big money as writers and artists. They drink lots of highballs, chain-smoke, worry about themselves and talk to each other in subtle banalities to cover their emotional high tension. They love with anxious violence-usually two people at the same time, until the last chapter. And mostly they are terribly good, terribly sensitive but terribly confused...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Recent Fiction, Nov. 19, 1945 | 11/19/1945 | See Source »

Elizabeth Janeway, whose first novel, The Walsh Girls, was a best-seller in 1943, has made Daisy Kenyan out of these fascinatingly unhappy people and their jittery world of New York, Washington, Connecticut, and Nantucket. At 32, Daisy is a beautiful, successful, emancipated magazine illustrator. For eight years her lover has been shrewd, rugged Dan O'Mara. Then she meets and marries high-strung magazine editor Peter Lapham...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Recent Fiction, Nov. 19, 1945 | 11/19/1945 | See Source »

...women) and writers with one or two books already published who switched from the remainder lists to the best-seller lists. Among the former were: Betty Smith, whose A Tree Grows in Brooklyn ($2.75) sold 460,000 copies in four months, Ilka Chase (In Bed We Cry, $2.50), Elizabeth Janeway (The Walsh Girls, $2.50), Helen Howe (The Whole Heart, $2.50), Allan Seager (Equinox, $2.75). Notable among the second group were Ayn Rand (The Fountainhead, $3) and Christine Weston, who with two unknown novels to her all but unknown literary credit, turned out Indigo ($2.50), which reviewers compared with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Year in Books, Dec. 20, 1943 | 12/20/1943 | See Source »

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