Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > McCullers, (Lula) Carson (Vol. 12) - Tennessee Williams
McCullers, (Lula) Carson (Vol. 12) - Tennessee Williams
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
[Reflections in a Golden Eye] is a second novel, and although its appreciation has steadily risen during the eight or nine years since its first appearance, it was then regarded as somewhat disappointing in the way that second novels usually are. When the book preceding a second novel has been very highly acclaimed, as was The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, there is an inclination on the part of critics to retrench their favor, so nearly automatic and invariable a tendency that it can almost be set down as a physical law. But the reasons for failure to justly evaluate this second novel go beyond the common, temporal disadvantage that all second novels must suffer, and I feel that an examination of these reasons may be of considerably greater pertinence to our aim of suggesting a fresh evaluation. (p. ix)
I believe that I am safe in assuming that it was [the critics'] identification of the author with a certain school of American...
[The entire page is 1036 words long]
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- Introduction
- Louis B. Salomon
- Richard Wright
- Clifton Fadiman
- Basil Davenport
- Fred T. Marsh
- Edmund Wilson
- George Dangerfield
- Marguerite Young
- Tennessee Williams
- Coleman Rosenberger
- William P. Clancy
- Dayton Kohler
- V. S. Pritchett
- Jane Hart
- Frederic Carpenter
- CARSON McCULLERS
- Rumer Godden
- Gore Vidal
- Catharine Hughes
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- Chester E. Eisinger
- Klaus Lubbers
- Jack B. Moore
- Oliver Evans
- Robert Drake
- Jeanne Kinney
- John Alfred Avant
- Joseph R. Millichap
- JOHN McNALLY
- Richard M. Cook
- Richard Gray
- Robert Phillips
- Copyright
