Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Of Human Bondage Maugham, W. Somerset - S. P. B. Mais (essay date 1923)
Of Human Bondage Maugham, W. Somerset - S. P. B. Mais (essay date 1923)
S. P. B. Mais (essay date 1923)
SOURCE: "Somerset Maugham," in Some Modern Authors, Dodd, Mead and Company, 1923, pp. 115-28.
[Mais was a British educator, nonfiction writer, and critic. In the following excerpt, he briefly comments on several of Maugham's early novels and discusses Of Human Bondage, describing it as a model of autobiographical fiction.]
For some twenty years Mr Somerset Maugham has been writing novels and plays, hammering hard on the doors of the critics' studies, clamouring for a hearing. For a long time they overlooked him. A man of indomitable courage, he has persevered and gone on from strength to strength until at last, in The Moon and Sixpence, he "rang the bell" (as the phrase goes) to such purpose that no intelligent reader could any longer deny him his place among the really brilliant leaders of modern fiction. There is an astringency about all his work that is most refreshing. He has stood his...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- W. Somerset Maugham (essay date 1915)
- R. Ellis Roberts (review date September 1915)
- William Morton Payne (review date 16 September 1915)
- S. P. B. Mais (essay date 1923)
- Marcus Aurelius Goodrich (essay date 25 January 1925)
- Dorothy Brewster and Angus Burrell (essay date October 1930)
- Theodore Spencer (essay date October 1940)
- W. Somerset Maugham (speech date 20 April 1946)
- Robert Spence (essay date Spring/Summer 1951)
- John R. Reed (essay date 1964)
- M. K. Naik (essay date 1966)
- Bonnie Hoover Braendlin (essay date 1984)
- Forrest D. Burt (essay date 1985)
- Joseph Dobrinsky (essay date October 1985)
- Archie K. Loss (essay date 1990)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
