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- An American Tragedy
-
-
- (JANUARY 25, 1926)
-
- An American Tragedy--Theodore Dreiser. Standing before this
- bear-cage in the literary zoo we say: What an enormous
- creature! How shaggy and powerful! How he lumbers about, yet
- they say a grizzly can outrun a horse! And when we have gazed
- our fill, we say: What a dirty, littered cage! An unkempt
- brute--but how enormous!
-
- This is the bear-like Mr. Dreiser's first novel since The
- Genius in 1915. It has been justly described as a "haunting,
- powerful tale of crime and punishment." But it is not to be
- recommended indiscriminately; not every one could labor through
- it. Mr. Dreiser has declined to improve his knowledge of the
- English language, and while he is a painstaking reporter, he is
- a very indifferent craftsman. For him it is more honest to
- ramble on for 840 pages than to attempt compression and readable
- sentences. Genius gleams fitfully through the welter. Mr.
- Dreiser observers life broadly, with great detachment and a
- cumbersome irony not unlike Hardy's. He is at times mystical,
- but more often merely confused.
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