“Tell Me a Book to Read”
Some of the Season′s Novels We Think Best Worth While
The White Monkey, by John Galsworthy (Scribner’s). Fine by itself, and continues his “Forsyte Saga” to the present time.
The Little French Girl, by Anna Douglas Sedgwick (Houghton, Mifflin). The pleasant love story, Anglo-French, that is Best-Selling.
A Passage To India, by E. M. Forster (Harcourt, Brace). A foaming-up of India’s race hate, pictured with searching skill.
The Green Hat, by Michael Arlen (Doran). Champagne stuff, sweet but worth drinking, about a light-o’-love and her playmates.
Sard Harker, by John Masefield (Macmillan). Wild tropical adventure, “unworthy of Masefield,” but—try to put it down!
The Old Ladies, by Hugh Walpole (Doran). As quiet and unpretentious as its title, and Walpole’s best novel.
The Cask, by Freeman Wills Croft (Seltzer). For detective story fans.
The House of the Arrow, by A. E. W. Mason (Doran). The first detective story with a gimcrack plot that we have ever liked.
SHORT STORIES
Tales of Heresay, by Joseph Conrad (Doubleday, Page). Four, all admirable and easy to read; you needn’t be a seasoned Conradian.
The Short Story’s Mutations, by Frances Newman (Huebsch). Sixteen well-chosen stories illustrate her brilliant theory.
BIOGRAPHIES AND THINGS
Mark Twain’s Autobiography (Harper). Haphazard recollections and discursions. Much junk, with much pure gold.
A Story-Teller’s Story, by Sherwood Anderson (Huebsch). A lifetime full of day-dreams, most artistically remembered.
Will Rogers’ Illiterate Digest (A. & C. Boni). Not as funny as seeing and hearing him; top of the humor heap, nevertheless.
Marbacka, by Selma Lagerlof (Doubleday, Page). Her story of her youth. Charming, if books ever get to be.
Letters from Theodore Roosevelt to Anna Roosevelt Cowles (Scribner′s). A side view of T. R. through his own eyes, especially good.
Memoirs of an Editor, by E. P. Mitchell (Scribner’s). Dana’s Sun “shop” and much more. An ideal book to dip in.
🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪
NATIONAL THEATRE
41st St. WEST OF BROADWAY
CROSBY GAIGE PRESENTS
H. B.
WARNER
IN THE MOST ABSORBING PLAY OF THE SEASON
“SILENCE”
“I would not have left the second act to play in a poker game in which I could call my own hands and show them to no one.”
—Heywood Broun—New York World
🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪🙪
MATINEES WED. & SAT.
2:30
Phone: Chickering 0092
HERMAN GANTVOORT
Presents
“HELL’S BELLS”
By BARRY CONNERS
“It cheered me up, it relaxed my strained nerves and really it was better than a tonic.”—Alan Dale, American
2ND YEAR. The Joyous Comedy Success.
The SHOW-OFF
By GEORGE KELLY
Arthur Hopkins presents Maxwell Anderson and Laurence Stallings's
!What Price Glory
“The outstanding theatrical success of the season."—Heywood Broun, World.
PLYMOUTH THEA., 45th ST., W. OF B′WAY. EVS. 8:30, MATS. THURS. & SAT., 2:30.
EXILES
By JAMES JOYCE
“A Masterpiece”—A. WOOLCOTT, Eve. Sun.
SAM H. HARRIS Presents IRVING BERLIN'S FOURTH ANNUAL
MUSIC BOX REVUE
Staged by JOHN MURRAY ANDERSON.
“A GORGEOUS ACTRESS." Alan Dale
MARJORIE RAMBEAU
in “The Valley of Content”
By BLANCHE UPRIGHT
MADGE KENNEDY
AND
GREGORY KELLY
Direction A. L. Erlanger
SEATS at $1
MY GIRL
Snappiest Musical Comedy in the U.S.A. HARRY ARCHER′S ORCHESTRA
Tickets now for Washington′s Birthday Matinee.
¶ Shaw′s “Candida” at 48th St. Theatre. Eves. 8:35. Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:30. Bry. 0178.
¶ Presented by Actors′ Theatre with this cast:
Katharine Cornell, Pedro de Cordoba, Richard Bird, Elizabeth Patterson, Ernest Cossart & Gerald Hamer.
Moves next week to another Theatre