America To-day, Observations and Reflections by William Archer
page 139 of 172 (80%)
page 139 of 172 (80%)
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host of novelists. But never, surely, was there a body of fiction that
touched life at so many points, to mirror if not to probe it. And in many cases to probe it as well. It would take a volume to criticise these writers in any detail. I can attempt no more than a bald and imperfect enumeration. Miss Mary Wilkins's studies of New England life are well known and appreciated in England, but the talent of Miss Sarah Orne Jewett is not sufficiently recognised. In her _Country of the Pointed Firs_, for example, there are whole chapters that rise to a classical perfection of workmanship. The novelists of the Eastern cities, with Mr. Howells, a master craftsman, at their head, are of course numberless. For studies in the local colour of New York nothing could be better than Professor Brander Matthews' _Vignettes of Manhattan_, and other stories. Mr. Paul Leicester Ford's _Honorable Peter Stirling_, though antiquated in style, gives a remarkable picture of political life in New York. The Bowery Boy is cleverly represented, so far as dialect at any rate is concerned, by Mr. E.W. Townsend in his _Chimmie Fadden_. Even the Jewish and the Italian quarters of New York have their portraitists in fiction. Life in Washington has been frequently and ably depicted; for instance, in Mrs. Burnett's _Through one Administration_. Of the many interpreters of the South I need mention only three: Mr. Cable, Mr. Thomas Nelson Page, and Mr. Chandler Harris. Miss Murfree ("Charles Egbert Craddock") has made the mountains of Tennessee her special province. Chicago has several novelists of her own: for example, Mr. Henry Fuller, author of _The Cliff Dwellers_, Mr. Will Payne, and that close student of Chicago slang, Mr. George Ade, the author of _Artie_. The Middle West counts such novelists as Miss "Octave Thanet" and Mr. Hamlin Garland, whose _Main Travelled Roads_ contains some very remarkable work. The Far West is best represented, perhaps, in the lively and graphic sketches of Mr. |
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