Parker, Dorothy - Louis Kronenberger (review date 1936)
Louis Kronenberger (review date 1936)
SOURCE: “The Rueful, Frostbitten Laughter of Dorothy Parker,” The New York Times Book Review, December 13, 1936, pp. 2, 28.
[In this review, Kronenberger discussed Parker's exploration of emotion and sentimentality through her use of wit and cynicism.]
It is just ten years since Mrs. Parker first made plain that the world is safe enough for girls who wear glasses, but reasonably precarious for most others. It is ten years or thereabouts since people began to repeat at dinner tables those bright sayings of hers which could not always have been repeated in print. She achieved, as she deserved, the title of wit; and here are her three volumes of poetry, now collected into one, to reassert her claim. Here is, I think, much the best light verse of our day which is highly personal in tone, which gains its effects through describing some one in a situation; and over and over again it is the same...
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Criticism
- Edmund Wilson (review date 1927)
- The New York Times Book Review (review date 1927)
- Marie Luhrs (review date 1927)
- William Rose Benét (review date 1928)
- Garreta Busey (review date 1928)
- Henry Seidel Canby (review date 1931)
- Percy Hutchison (review date 1931)
- Harold Rosenberg (essay date 1931)
- William Rose Benét (review date 1936)
- Louis Kronenberger (review date 1936)
- Monica Redlich (review date 1937)
- Edith H. Walton (review date 1928)
- Arthur F. Kinney (essay date 1998)
- Arthur F. Kinney (essay date 1998)
- Copyright
