Parker, Dorothy - Percy Hutchison (review date 1931)
Percy Hutchison (review date 1931)
SOURCE: “Satire and Epigram in Dorothy Parker's Versicles,” in The New York Times Book Review, June 14, 1931, p. 4.
[Hutchison reads Death and Taxes as a “small package of literary delights,” that reveals truth amid a mixture of the serious and lighthearted.]
Since, according to the old proverb, death and taxes are the only certainties in life, we assume that Dorothy Parker means by her title that the poems of the collection were equally inevitable. But since all assumptions are likely to be fallible when dealing with the literary output of this pleasing and disconcerting lady, we discreetly withdraw from further pursuit of the subject. Death and Taxes is a thin book, housing something like half a hundred short poems—several are very short indeed. But invariably the quality is in inverse ratio to the quantity.
Dorothy Parker's function in the body literary and the body...
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- Introduction
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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
