Autumn Leaves
THURBER'S DOGS, by James Thurber (294 pp.; Simon & Schuster: $3.95), are certainly the most lovingly regarded dogs in U.S. literature. Whether he draws them or writes about them, Thurber does it with the air of a man who knows what it is to lead a dog's life. A collection of pieces and pictures sometimes as affecting as they are funny.
THE PIPE, by Georges Herment (164 pp.; Simon & Schuster; $4.95), is an amusing, discursive history of pipes and pipe smoking. Care and cleaning, seasoning, choice of tobacco, how to fill and then empty the bowl, are all gone into with light seriousnessand sometimes almost with mysticism. In an introduction, British Humorist Stephen (Lifemanship) Potter explains about pipemanship, e.g., "practiced pipe smoking is capable of making a cigarette smoker seem flustered and untidy, particularly if [he] maintains a long worm of ash messily drooping from his cigarette."
How FAR THE PROMISED LAND, by Walter White (244 pp.; Viking; $3.50), finished just before Author White's death last spring, is a sensible, optimistic report on the progress made by Negroes during the past 15 years. White, for years director of N.A.A.C.P., calmly noted that "we are on our way."
THREE YEARS WITH GRANT, by Sylvanus Cadwallader (353 pp.; Knopf; $4.75), though written in the 18905, has until now escaped the publishing industry's hunger for Civil War books. The author was a Northern correspondent with Grant's headquarters 1862-65. His easy, intimate description-of Grant as man and soldier contributes a candid, fresh view of the Union commander.
EPISODE IN THE TRANSVAAL, by Harry Bloom (295 pp.; Doubleday; $3.95), is an authentic novel about South Africa, in which a self-righteous white superintendent snaps his bureaucratic whip once too often in a native "location." Johannesburg Lawyer-Novelist Harry Bloom, who jars the conscience by way of the solar plexus, all but makes audible the "roar of the lion" in 12,000 black throats.
ROBERT BENCHLEY, by Nafhaniel Benchley (258 pp.; McGraw-Hill; $3.95), is a son's biography of one of the funniest men the U.S. ever produced. No chip off the old block, son Nathaniel rather unsuccessfully relies on love and anecdotes to do what few writers have ever been able to achieve: a funny book on the anatomy of another man's humor.
UTOPIA 1976, by Morns L. Ernst (305 pp.; Rinehart; $3.50), plays that ancient but recently revived game: What will the world be like in X years? Lawyer Ernst's answer for 1976 (assuming no atomic war): marvelous. Incomes will be doubled, politics will be dominated by brotherhood, insanity will be on the decrease and even lawyers will join in "the search for truth." A do-gooder's weekend mirage.
HIGHWAY OF THE SUN, by Victor W. von Hagen (320 pp.; Duell, Sloan & Pearce-Llttle, Brown; $6), describes an expedition undertaken in 1952 to retrace the famous Inca roads of the west coast of South America. A vivid and frequently fascinating mixture of history, anthropology and archaeology which sharply restores an ancient civilization.
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