Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Stafford, Jean - Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
Stafford, Jean - Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
SOURCE: "Who Remembers That Fine Fellow, What's-His-Name?" in New York Herald Tribune Book Week, Vol. 2, No. 5, October 11, 1964, pp. 6, 21.
[In this review of Bad Characters, Perry finds Stafford's villains enthralling but notes that a "nagging, sometimes boring, similarity surrounds her 'good' characters." ]
Jean Stafford, one of the finest writers publishing today, is a genius at creating "bad" characters.
Consider Persis Galt, a Boston lady living in Heidelberg just before the outbreak of the war, in her middle forties, "rich and ripe like an autumn fruit" with a "stalwart Massachusetts jaw." She is fascinating whether masquerading in tweeds or dressed in low-cut black velvet, an ebony cross on her white bosom, surrounded by sycophantic monks. In spite of the fact that she is a fanatical convert to Catholicism, she regularly violates the sixth commandment with a young Nazi officer named...
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- Introduction
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Criticism
- Howard Mumford Jones (review date 1953)
- William Peden (review date 1953)
- Olga W. Vickery (essay date 1962)
- Eleanor Perry (review date 1964)
- Honor Tracy (review date 1964)
- Thomas Curley (review date 1965)
- Guy Davenport (review date 1969)
- Morris Dickstein (review date 1969)
- Irving Malin (review date 1969)
- Joyce Carol Oates (essay date 1979)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1982)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1983)
- Mary Ellen Williams Walsh (essay date 1985)
- William G. Leary (essay date 1986)
- Maureen Ryan (essay date 1987)
- Bruce Bawer (essay date 1988)
- Stacey D'Erasmo (essay date 1992)
- Further Reading
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