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This section contains 3,525 words (approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page) |
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Critical Essay by J. H. Bowden
[But Who Wakes the Bugler?, De Vries's first published novel,] has a certain charm as a product of its time. And it is dated: not only is there a stage Negro, Jubal, who speaks in a thick dialect, but it's the man—Mr. Thwing—not his fiancée Hermina, who can't face up to matrimony. Now it's women who fear stifling. (p. 11)
The novel is essentially formless, but there is some pattern supplied by Mr. Thwing's attempt to solve an apparent murder in the Chicago rooming house he owns: a Dutch sea captain, Jehoiachim, who gives his age at 106, is found dead at the foot of the stairs after a large report is heard, and at the same time a Chinese is caught by Mr. Thwing while in the act of stealing a vase of great value from Jehoiachim's room. But Jehoiachim isn't killed till page 124, and the main issue...
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This section contains 3,525 words (approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page) |
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