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romantic into an acceptable,
even sympathetic, character.
Of the British writers, the best
work of the year has been turned
in by the younger writers just
reaching full maturity. Among
these, Liam O’Flaherty is a writer
of an astonishing modern style and
power. He has been influenced by
Synge and Joyce and probably the
Continent, as his work is out of the
English tradition. He is concerned
with the obsession of terror and
flight. His “Mrs. Gilhooley” is
prodigious. It is more than a psychological
study of a well-known
Irish type: it is alive, fused by the
rampant energy that blends imaginative
and realistic detail into a
narrative of such strength as to
suggest the possession of nothing
less than genius. The revelation
of character is a deep probing of
the dark places of the heart and
mind.
A novel marking considerable
change of style is F. Brett Young’s
“Love is Enough,” a story of the
English countryside that will make
any Englishman homesick in far-
off places. With such a background
he has traced, minutely,
the life of a gentlewoman from
birth to early Autumn. Mr.
Young’s chronicle of the passing of
three generations of two English
families is full of full-length portraits
that are in the best tradition
of the English novel. The shorter
novel of David Garnett’s “Go She
Must” has also the background of
England’s garden vistas. He no
longer traffics with the fables of
man and animals, but the note of
fantasy, with its varying imaginative
implications, illuminates the
adventures of this odd young
woman living in a country vicarage.
Another novel of the country
gentry is “Rowforest,” by Anthony
Pryde. It is a well balanced study
of the changing order. Against the
intruding new rich, the impoverished
landed family, in this instance
of Rowforest, in debt
through their elders, refused to
slip into graceful decay and abandon
their ancestral home to upstarts.
There is hearty blood to
this family, and a real struggle is
made which is contrary to the conventional
tale of the broken-down
nobleman. A novel of well-drawn
characters and carefully sustained
interest.
The fiction of Mrs. Delafield has
recently shown a steady advance.
In “Jill,” a post-war study of London,
she has presented a most interesting
group of people in sharp
contrast to each other. With dexterity
she has commanded a divided
interest in her characterization
of a hard, sophisticated young
couple, made rotters by the war,
and of a young woman whose simplicity
and native shrewdness mark
her as a child of nature. In “The
Allinghams,” May Sinclair has told
of a family of children being inhibited
by their old-fashioned parents.
As a family of children they are
incredibly unlike each other and
the victims of Freud rather than
fate. Storm Jameson has turned
back to the time of wooden ships.
Her heroine in “The Lovely Ship”
becomes the dominant factor in a
shipyard and is too strong a character
to find any satisfaction in her
lovers. But feminism in “The
Lovely Ship” warps not only the
heart and mind of the heroine, but
also the ending of the novel. The
early years of clipper building are
picturesquely described.
The gift of Miss Warner’s “Mr.
Fortune’s Maggot” is a deft compression
of method. With almost
as much topsy-turvy fantasy as
Chesterton, in transmuting the
commonplace into things fantastic,
she brings “Robinson Crusoe” up
to date in about the same manner
that Chesterton would reverse the
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