' Sunday, Oct. 13, 1963 Page 4
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Good
Books
United Press International
Brazil on the Move by John
Dos Passos (Doubleday $3.95 :
Basing his remarks in this book
on three trips to Brazil in 1948, )
1936 and 1962, Dos Passos notes
that the most Dressing neeH In
Brazil is to grow enough food
to feed the population, a task for
which communism is ill fitted...
'the world over Marxism hac
failed to produce food." He sees
as the heroes of the country the
doctors in the interior who' are
fighting the battle for sanitation,
the road builders and the school
teachers. Among the intellectuals
of Brazil Dos Passos found wide
spread anti - Americanism and
noted that communists and pro
communists have the easiest life
because they get their pay in the
form of free trios to the U S S R
or to Cuba. The anti-communists
have to work for nothing. Among
the lower classes he found nn roal
feeling against the United States.
He said they are too busy trying
to get a square meal, a roof over
their heads and few clothes for
the children to engage in hatreds.
The Shining, by Stephen Mar
lowe. (Triden Press $5,951: A vi
vid, fast-moving novel about a
period better known to classical
Greek scholars than to the usual
American fiction reader the
years between, roughly, 420 and
400 B.C., covering the end of the
Peloponnesian War and ultimate
ly the march of Xenophon's 10,
000. These were the years that
ruined Athens, and the story told
by Marlowe's hero, Hiero of Mar
athon, is accordingly often a dole
ful one. Hiero thought of him
self as an Athenian, althouch
there was some doubt of his right
to that distinction. But Hiero
lived in hope, not knowing what
me end was to be, and he had
his moments of triumph capped,
or course, by the final achieve
ment of the 10.000 hard-trained
Greeks who followed Xenophon
through miles of hostile, inhos
pitable territory to the friendly
sea. There were three women in
Hiero's life Theonoe, his blue
eyed cousin (or was she?); Pyr
rha, the courtesan from whom he
learned about women, and Lais,
tomboy daughter of the Spartan
captain who betrayed him into
slavery. The path of true lova
proved uncommonly rough, but
not unhappy in the end.
Principal Characters
The three principal characters
in the book, each an able soldier
in his way. are Alcibiades, the
renegade Athenian who seemed
alternately villain or genius, and
probably was both; the ill-fated
Persian Prince Cyrus the Young
er and the doughty Xenophon.
Marlowe, known in the past prin
cipally as an auLhor of paper
backs, has done a masterful job
of keeping "The Shining" within
the limits of recorded reality
without impairing its pace and
personality.
Crusades And Crinolines by lsh
bel Ross (Harper & Row $6):
Miss Ross, a biographer whose
subjects are more likely to be
periods than merely persons, uses
the lives of two remarkable
Americans as the central theme
for a vivid cultural history of 19th
Century New York. Her principal
Human subjects are William Jen
nings and Ellen Curtis Demorest,
a husband-and-wife team which
functioned as harmoniously in the
office as in the home.
Pioneer
Mrs. Demorest pioneered the
manufacture of tissue-paper dress
patterns years before Butterick.
Her husband was the merchant
promoter who made his wife's
dress-and-pattern business an in
ternational enterprise and became
a crusading editor in the process.
(He also made a fortune in real
estate'. A potent third member
of the Demorest business team'
was "Jenny June" (Mrs. David
G. Croly', the indefatigable for
mer newspaperwoman who wrote
most of the editorial copy for the
family magazine an "early
Beatrice Fairfax, Dorothy Dix,
Dear Abby and Mary Haworth
rolled into one." Among the caus
es for which this combination
campaigned jointly or separately
were abolition, integration, prohi
bition and equal economic and cul
tural rights for women. Around
this trio Miss Ross has assembled
a gallery of other personalities,
tracing' through them the turbu
lent progress of New York from
the Roaring Forties to the Gay
Nineties. It is an informative and
interesting book about an import
ant period in American history,
written with a wry hind tight
which often lends an extra sig
nificance to the events it chron
icles. ISSUED PRISON FIGURES
MADRID (UPP Government
figures issued today showed a to
tal of 13,735 prisoners in Spanish
jails at the fend of 19T2.
A report from the general di
rectorate of prisons said there
er 44.J persons in prison per
100.000 population. It said there
are 659 men and 399 women pris
oners serving sentences in con
nection with security cases.