Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Algren, Nelson - Haskel Frankel (review date 1963)
Algren, Nelson - Haskel Frankel (review date 1963)
Haskel Frankel (review date 1963)
SOURCE: "They're Human Too," in Washington Post Book Week, Vol. 1, December 8, 1963, p. 20.
[In the following excerpt from a review of the anthology Nelson Algren's Own Book of Lonesome Monsters, Frankel discusses Algren's introduction to the work and the one story he contributed, "The House of the Hundred Grassfires."]
Algren on learning to write:
Nobody yet ever learned to write at a writers' conference. For these are social occasions; while writing, always and everywhere, is as secret and antisocial as safecracking. All you can possibly learn here is what other men's lights are.
You have to have your own lights to go by, and your own fences for leaping. And these you find only off by yourself. Off on your own where you learn to set your own pace, take your own chances, and your own sweet time as well.
For in the end it is only in the impartial...
[The entire page is 487 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- John Woodburn (review date 1947)
- Catherine Meredith Brown (review date 1947)
- George Bluestone (essay date 1957)
- Maxwell Geismar (essay date 1958)
- Haskel Frankel (review date 1963)
- R. W. Lid (essay date 1966)
- Daniel R. Silkowski (essay date 1971)
- James R. Frakes (review date 1973)
- Saul Maloff (review date 1974)
- Commonweal (review date 1947)
- R. W. Lid (essay date 1975)
- Martha Heasley Cox and Wayne Chatterton (essay date 1975)
- Tom Carson (essay date 1986)
- Kirkus Reviews (review date 1995)
- Albert E. Wilhelm (review date 1995)
- Bettina Drew (essay date 1995)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
