Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Huxley, Aldous - William Jacob Cuppy (review date 1922)
Huxley, Aldous - William Jacob Cuppy (review date 1922)
William Jacob Cuppy (review date 1922)
SOURCE: “Huxley as a Serious Writer,” in Aldous Huxley: The Critical Heritage, edited by Donald Watt, 1975, pp. 74-6.
[In the review of Mortal Coils below, which was originally published in the New York Sunday Tribune in 1922, Cuppy rejects earlier assessments of this collection as superficial, insisting that Huxley is a serious writer.]
In the Dial for June Mr. Raymond Mortimer opines that the principal end and aim of Aldous Huxley is to be ‘amusing,’ and insists to the author of Crome Yellow upon the importance of being earnest.
On May 27 Mr. Burton Rascoe, having lunched, allowed in the Doran offices as to how Aldous Huxley, ‘undoubtedly the most adroit and amusing’ of the clever young Englishmen, ‘deals in superficies, but with a gay, satirical touch.’
On June 13 Mr. Ben Ray Redman, having dined, announced at Mr. Louis Untermeyer's that...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Herbert S. Gorman (review date 1920)
- Virginia Woolf (review date 1920)
- William Jacob Cuppy (review date 1922)
- Times Literary Supplement (review date 1924)
- Arnold Bennett (essay date 1924)
- L. P. Hartley (review date 1926)
- Joseph Wood Krutch (review date 1926)
- Henry Hazlitt (review date 1930)
- Kenneth Payson Kempton (essay date 1953)
- P. H. Newby (review date 1957)
- V. S. Pritchett (review date 1957)
- Arthur F. Beringause (essay date 1964)
- Charles M. Holmes (essay date 1970)
- Donald J. Watt (essay date 1970)
- Maria Schubert (essay date 1984)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
