Monday, Sep. 04, 1950

RECENT & READABLE

Collected Stories of William Faulkner.

Forty-two stories, half of them good, half a dozen very good, by one of the best U.S. writers of his generation (TIME, Aug. 28).

Cats and People, by Frances and Richard Lockridge. Felis domestica, from tail to whiskers, from ancient Egypt to the present (TIME, Aug. 28).

The Secret Game, by Francois Boyer.

A stark little story about the game with animals and crosses that two French children thought up after seeing too much death (TIME, Aug. 14).

Springtime in Paris, by Elliot Paul. A postwar report by the author of The Last Time I Saw Paris; chiefly for fellow Francophiles (TIME, Aug. 14).

The Old Bailey and Its Trials, by Bernard O'Donnell. A hair-raising history of London's famous, once infamous, old court of law (TIME, Aug. 7).

Beyond Defeat, by Hans Richter. The last, lost stages of World War II as seen by Germans who fought at Cassino. A rough but engrossing novel by a onetime private in Hitler's Wehrmacht (TIME, July 31).

The Child Who Never Grew, by Pearl -- Buck. The simple and memorable story

(of Novelist Pearl Buck's effort to make a life for her mentally retarded child (TIME, July 24).

Two Adolescents, by Alberto Moravia.

Two Italian boys in the perils of puberty.

Avoiding the perils of bathos, Author Moravia (Woman of Rome) keeps his storytelling clear and dry (TIME, July 24).

Orley Farm, by Anthony Trollope.

Country life in Victorian England with a full-blown Trollopean cast of characters

and enough novelist's insight to equip a dozen contemporary novelists; reissued as the first of a new Trollope series (TIME, July 10).

Follow Me Down, by Shelby Foote.

How a God-fearing Mississippi farmer is seized by temptation and driven to murder; a taut little novel of crime & passion (TIME, July 3).

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