Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Voigt, Cynthia - Ethel L. Heins
Voigt, Cynthia - Ethel L. Heins
ETHEL L. HEINS
Fluent but never terse, the author compounds the mystery [that is the center of The Callender Papers] with a multitude of details and digressions, some of which border on melodrama. And Jean, so young in years, may strain the reader's credulity with her mature, self-possessed first-person account, which occasionally dips into fairly complex moral, and even philosophical, discussions.
Ethel L. Heins, in a review of "The Callender Papers," in The Horn Book Magazine, Vol. 59, No. 4, August, 1983, p. 458.
[The entire page is 96 words long]
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