- A ',' ' f ." is, 4 4 r .jr.'-,". r1 S ' 1 'A 'J . f " ' ' it h I i V 1 The f i. I 1 i if , fhe OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, September 6, 1936 9 The Oregon ) 7; mmm m wiai tddie cmmrncs sY: From the Chicago Tribune "The story I . . mounts to high tragedy and na tive nobility. . . I It is . . . touched with such vivid ness and such satire that the reader will not miss J a word. All of Sinclair, Lewis' best cunning has -come back to him in 'It Can't Happen Here.' .Whether it is Sinclair Lewis' greatest novel can't be .said. rIt is too powerful a blow. The reader feels such a terrific impact that he doesn't stop to analyze what hashit him." ! ! - i - , - " ; : ' ' ' -" t ' ' ' - - - i' ' I . - - t - e- - i - , - - . - : 1 - - From liberty Magazine " 'It Can't Happen Here is . . . consistently interesting and even fascinating. , Don't walk, but RUN to the nearest bookstore for the most interest ing of the new season's books." I f 1 . r From the Buffalo Evening fK'ews " 'It Can't Happen Here' should be prescribed reading for all Americans." f E From the Boston Herald : 'Here is a book wrhose theme first seems too utterly fantastic, and yet Mr. Lewis makes of it a novel so thought-compelling and real that few can read it and not realize that here is something furi ous,! inspiring and loaded with dynamite. We ex pect it may be called Mr. Lewis' masterpiece. Be side it 'Main Street,' 'Babbitt,' 'Arrowsmith,' 'Dods worth' are as tame' as 'Alice in Wonderland.' " From the IVew York Herald Tribune "Sinclair Lewis . . faces the issue more real istically . . . than any other contemporary American novelist This torrential, controversial book will certainly be more haed than any of Mr. Lewis's most recent books. . . . Here, as in 'Main Street,' he is. genius at revealing warts and pimples on our noses which we did not know were there but which, once pointed out, are nevermore to be denied.' From the New York Times "One wishes for 'It Can't Happen Here' one hundred and thirty million American readers." 1 From the New Yorker . " 'It Can't Happen Here is a picture of what is apt to happen to you and you and you, if and when a Fascist dictatorship is established in this cduntry. It is Mr. Lewis' most important, passion ate and moving book. Required reading." Begins Sunday, September , 'f ----- fc-i-iiri 11 I" II Mil IHIlMllllll lllllMlll iT Lffl' - - i 1 i - i ! . I "I it's! SAW ViissC 1 ; i j .