Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Cozzens, James Gould (Vol. 92) - The Times Literary Supplement (review date 30 January 1969)
Cozzens, James Gould (Vol. 92) - The Times Literary Supplement (review date 30 January 1969)
The Times Literary Supplement (review date 30 January 1969)
SOURCE: "Ponderosity," in The Times Literary Supplement, No. 3492, January 30, 1969, p. 116.
[In the following negative review of Morning Noon and Night, the critic contends that Cozzens's attempt to expose "the reality beneath pretension" is undermined by a ponderous prose style.]
The narrator of Mr. Cozzens's new novel [Morning Noon and Night] is Henry (Hank) Dodd Worthington, the sexagenarian founder and head of H.W. Associates, a firm of industrial management consultants preeminent in that field. The novel is presented in the form of a meditation on his life, or lives, and those of his ancestors, an inquiry that may be meaningful to others in so far as it is also an inquiry into the meaning of life at different ages and on different stages. H.W., the public figure, is as highly regarded as he is successful. But Hank has done many shameful things, the ill...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- George J. Becker (review date June 1949)
- Martin Price (review date Autumn 1957)
- Benjamin De Mott (essay date Winter 1957)
- Richard G. Stern (review date Winter 1958)
- Frederick Bracher (essay date 1959)
- The Times Literary Supplement (review date 6 May 1965)
- John Brooks (review date 25 August 1968)
- John Updike (review date 2 November 1968)
- The Times Literary Supplement (review date 30 January 1969)
- James A. Epperson (review date 8 December 1978)
- Robert Scholes (essay date 1979)
- Colin S. Cass (essay date Fall 1981)
- Irving Malin (essay date Winter 1981)
- Terry Teachout (review date 28 February 1986)
- Richard A. Posner (essay date 1988)
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