The Novelist as Dramatist: Davies’ Adaptation of “Leaven of Malice”
Abstract: THOUGH ROBERTSON DAVIES’ FIRST LOVE WAS THEATRE, and he was a playwright first, he has achieved greater recognition as a ...
The Novels of Ethel Wilson
Abstract: ?DISTINCTIVE ELEMENT in Ethel Wilson’s fiction is its tone. ??? It seems as if the centre of each book were ...
The Nth Adam: Dante in Klein’s “The Second Scroll”
Abstract: No; Canada has produced no Dante . . . WILLIAM ARTHUR DEACON, Pens and Pirates AM. KLEIN, LIKE MANY OF ...
The Occasions of Irving Layton
Abstract: FULL EXPOSURE to Irving Layton’s work and character (through the work) is for me very recent. What is distinctive about ...
The Old Age of the New
Abstract: I? WILL NO DOUBT seem unfair that I should use the receipt of review copies of eleven books of Canadian ...
The Old Futility of Art: Knister’s Poetry
Abstract: M.LOST CRITICAL STATEMENTS about Raymond Knister’s verse insist upon the vividness of his portrayal of Ontario farm life and the ...
The One and the Many: English-Canadian Short Story Cycles
Abstract: Q’VER THE PAST HUNDRED years the short story cycle has become something of a sub-genre within the Canadian short story.1 ...
The Other Mr. Leacock
Abstract: STEPHEN LEACOCK was four parts humorist, one part poli- tical economist and two parts controversialist. During his lifetime these discrete ...
The Other Side of the Cash Register: A Bookseller’s View
Abstract: PUBLISHERS AND BOOKSELLERS have never been really friendly, although they have many common interests. One reason is that book- sellers ...
The Outlook for Canadian Literature
Abstract: 1IOR OVER A QUARTER OF A CENTURY now, I have been engaged intermittently in the task of publicly taking the ...