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T - Tc
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Tuchman, Gaye
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Tucker, Margaret
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Tucker, Martin
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Tuckerman, Anne
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Tuell, Anne Kimball
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Tumber, Catherine
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Tunmore, Henry P.
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Tuohey, John F.
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Turco, Lewis
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Turkle, Sherry
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Turnbull, Belle
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Turnell, Gertin
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Turnell, Martin
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The Novel and the Cinema:
(September 1979)
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bum ham-'n'-egger, part-time strong-arm for the Mafia, but he southpaw to a right-hander, then to confuse the champ, he's to was good-natured about it. The whole idea of a heavyweight ...
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BOOKS
(October 1977)
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of. Bloom, however, does not. Rather, he compounds the coldness so that Stevens seems frozen to the core, icier than his own snow man. Bloom's Stevens is also a poet totally self-deceived, a...
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HERO OF OUR TIME
(December 1966)
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A HERO OF OUR TIME Peguy was not a great writer but a great man MARTIN TURNELL Although Charles Peguy has become one of France's national heroes, he is not widely known or read outside his...
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MALRAUX'S FATE
(June 1965)
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_9 _9 _9 Novelist as picaresque hero MALRAUX'S FATE 0 0 0 0 0 _9 _9 _9 _9 _9 _9 MARTIN TURNELL _9 _9 _9 Andr6 Malraux is one of the most colorful figures in contemporary literature and one of...
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The Brothets Goncourt
(October 1962)
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A Genius for Gossip The Brothers Goncourt MARTIN...
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Adventurer Montherlant
(May 1961)
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RUTHLESS AND UNCOMFORTABLE Adventurer Montherlant by MARTIN TURNELL IN HIS introduction to a new translation of Henry de Montherlant's Selected Essays, Peter Quennell writes: "No French...
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Historian or Visionary?
(March 1960)
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HONOR~ DE BALZAC ' lkdFe .9 e~ Historian or visionary.
by MARTIN TURNELL ~I THINK Balzac is the greatest novelist the I world has ever known," Mr. Somerset Maugham once said. Many...
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IV Religion and Esthetic Values
(October 1959)
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IV-Religion and Esthetic Values T HE RELATION of morality to literature continues to be one of the cloudiest and most con- troversial concerns of the esthetic theorists, if not of the moralists....
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The Place of Pascal
(August 1959)
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"A DIFFICULT AUTHOR" The Place of Pascal by MARTIN TURNELL p ASCAL is a difficult author because his work invites wildly differing personal interpretations. He was, moreover, a passionate,...
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The Epic of St.-John Perse
(July 1959)
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FeET ON TH,E HEROIC SCALE The Epic of St.-John Perse by MARTIN TURNELL ~ ' 1 [ ' 1 ~ T E ARE a long way from Marcel Proust." W When I first read it, this sentence from Claudel's essay on...
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Proust's Invisible Vocation
(June 1958)
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BOOK5 Proust's Invisible Vocation by MARTIN TURNELL I N FRANCE the study of great writers tends to develop into a minor industry. These industries have their ups and downs which depend on...
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Prince of French Critics?
(September 1957)
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SAINTE-BEUVE Prince of French Critics? MARTIN TURNELL CHARLES MAURRAS once wrote, "It will perhaps be our criticism which most fittingly will last longest. A Sainte-Beuve and a Renan will...
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Poet of Contradiction
(August 1957)
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Poet of Contradiction MARTIN TURN ELL PAUL VALERY was born at Sete on the French Mediterranean coast on October 30, 1871 and died in Paris on July 20, 1945, ten days before the dropping of the...
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The Achievement of Cocteau
(December 1956)
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ARTIST AND MAN The Achievement of Cocteau MARTIN TURNELL ALTHOUGH we are inclined to think of Cocteau as a virtuoso who has practiced all or nearly all the arts, this is not how he himself sees...
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The Legend of Jean Cocteau
(December 1956)
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ARTIST AND MAN The Legend of Jean Cocteau MARTIN TURNELL FOR MANY years Jean Cocteau has been a legendary figure not only in his own country, but among people in other countries with scarcely any...
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Books
(June 1956)
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BOOKS The Dramatic Clash of Great French Churchmen THE ARCHBISHOP AND THE LADY: The Story of F~nelon and Madame Guyon. By Michael de la Bedoyere. Pantheon. $3.50. By MARTIN TURNELL C OUNT...
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The Anomaly of André Gide
(May 1956)
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"ABNORMAL AS NORM" The Anomaly of Andre Gide MARTIN TURNELL A NDRI~ GIDE wrote so freely about himself, and drew so heavily on his personal experience in his fiction, that it seems almost...
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Proust's Early Novel
(December 1955)
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BOOKS Proust's Early Novel MARTIN TURNELL O UR age is often called an age of criticism. It might with even greater truth be called an age of research. There never was an age with such a...
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The Novels of Raymond Radiguet
(July 1955)
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INFANT PRODIGY The Novels of Raymond Radiguet MARTIN TURNELL A MONG the French youth who crowded the smart Paris cocktail bars at the end of the First World War, observers noticed a tall,...
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Claudel: The Intolerance of Genius
(May 1955)
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CLAUDEL: CHRISTIAN AND WRITER The Intolerance of Genius "HE WAS DETERMINED, IN SPITE OF OURSELVES, TO DRAG US AWAY FROM DOUBT AND DILETTANTISM'" MARTIN TURNELL T HERE are certain French poets...
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Belief and the Writer
(May 1955)
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Belief and the Writer "THE SUCCESS OF A RELIGIOUS NOVEL DEPENDS ON A VERY DELICATE BALANCE BETWEEN THE MAN WHO BELIEVES AND THE MAN WHO WRITES" MARTIN TURNELL T S. ELIOT's essays on the...
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Book Reviews
(January 1955)
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The Inside Picture of Stendhal's Formative Years THE PRIVATE DIARIES OF STENDHAL. Edited and Translated by Robert Sage. Doubleday. $7.50 By MARTIN TURNELL I N 1799, when he was sixteen years...
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Flaubert as Letter-Writer
(November 1954)
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BOOKS Flaubert as Letter-Writer MARTIN TURNELL A FRENCH critic has lately described Flaubert's correspondence as "puerile." It is a strange judgment. The greatest authors are not invariably...
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Marcel Jouhandeau
(June 1954)
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MARCEL JOUHANDEAU The Moral Algebra of a Strange Talent MARTIN TURNELL I T is a strange thing that though international celebrity comes easily to some writers, other writers of outstanding...
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The Legend of Alain-Fournier
(March 1954)
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BOOKS The Legend of Alain-Fournier MARTIN TURNELL LAIN-FOURNIER is known to the majority...
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The Claudel-Gide Correspondence
(December 1952)
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BOOKS The Claudel-Gide Correspondence MARTIN TURNELL AMONG the distinguished writers who used to attend Mallarme's Tuesday receptions in the Rue de Rome during the last decade of...
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Donne's Quest for Unity
(October 1952)
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15 Donne's Quest for Unity MARTIN TURNELL NEARLY all John Donne's critics have commented on the variety of mood of the Songs and Sonets and on the contrast between his secular and religious...
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Baroque Art and Poetry
(May 1952)
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Baroque Art And Poetry MARTIN TURN ELL IN The Lost Childhood Graham Greene discusses Richard Crashaw. "Crashaw's style," he writes, "if it occasionally has the beauty of those 'marble plains,' is...
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A Note on Jacques Riviere
(August 1951)
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A Note on Jacques Riviere By MARTIN TURNELL WHEN Jacques Riviere died of typhoid fever in 1925 at the early aige of thirty-eight, European literature was deprived of one of the ...
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Andre Gide
(May 1951)
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Andre Gide His early upbringing and his revolt against it is the staple of his best work. By MARTIN TURNELL GIDE'S work has never aroused the same violent differences of opinion in...
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Turner, A. Campbell
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Turner, Denys
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Turner, Edith
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Turner, Ethel
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Turner, Frank M.
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Turner, Grace
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TURNER, HARVEY
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TURNER, JAMES
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Turner, James C.
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Turner, Katharine C.
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TURNNBULL, JOHN W.
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TUROWICZ, JERZY
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Tushnet, Eve
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Tushnet, Meghan Sullivan, David Cloutier, Cathleen Kaveny, George Scialabba, Lisa Fullam, Massimo Fa
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Tuting, Bernhard Johann
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Tuttle, Jonathan
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Tverdek, Edward
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Twohey, John C.
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Twomey, L. J.
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Tyler, A. E.
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Tyler, Anne
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Tynan, Katharine
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Tynan, Meynell: II Katharine
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Tyrell, Vorothy
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Tytell, John
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Tzaban, Yair
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