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Although the plot of the play still remains a mystery, Coach Louis Silvers, in an interview last night, gave several hints as to its general nature...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "1776" SLATED TO GET UNDER WAY THIS EVENING | 4/14/1926 | See Source »

...High Adventure", after all, is not quite so lofty as its name might suggest. For the most half romanticist feels the need of certain tricks of style and thought to keep him from waking to reality. And Mr. Farnol has given him few in this particular work. The plot is very, very apparent. One reality guesses who the real villian is early in the story, and from the moment Olivia Revell descends her ladder into the world of Jeremy it is obvious that she is his forever. Mystery does not befog this highway, though the author try to build mazes...

Author: By D. S. Gibbs, | Title: Romance in Cocked Hats and Shirt Sleeves | 4/10/1926 | See Source »

Then, the people are charming, even though they flit in and out of the plot without rhyme or reason. They live in nice places, picnic and go trout-fishing whether at home or in the Pyrenees for financial reasons, have their jokes and family catch-words in a delightful idyllic existence. If a reader is reconciled to a purposeless book that smells of what the English country life should be (and the combination has refreshing elements) the flavor of "The Dinosaur's Egg" is sufficiently delicate to make one wish that such eggs were a staple commodity on the market...

Author: By J. B. K. ., | Title: THE DINOSAUR'S EGG. by Edmund Candler. E. P. Dutton and Company, New York. 1926. $2.50. | 4/10/1926 | See Source »

...Cover Charge" has neither plot, nor beginning nor end. The aurnor purports to supply one in the career of Alan, the hero. What it comes down to is a series of sordid affairs strung together with a certain deftness which is hardly compelling. In flashers, Mr. Woolrich's characters stand out in three dimensions. For the most part, however, they remain the tinsel marionnettes which the author undoubtedly intended them to be in order to gain his distorted effects. He tries to be surprising and clever in his use of words and situations but he too often descends to sheer...

Author: By H. W. F. ., | Title: The Wild Life Problem | 4/10/1926 | See Source »

...formula of mystery is known to everyone. From the boy who tingles at the mention of murder to those rogues of the book world who are weary of the sameness of sudden death, the novel involving crime and courtship, homicide, and happiness, is familiar. Since its plot departs from this head-scratching standard set up by the writers of dectective fiction. "The Blind Goddess" may amuse even experienced cynics Instead of attempting to mystify, the amiable author has Richard Devens, a rich contractor, accidentally shot by Daniel Shay, his friend and business associate, before the eyes of the reader. This...

Author: By D. C. Backus ., | Title: Two of Harvard's Novelists | 4/10/1926 | See Source »

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