“Is an elevated and closely knit moral system with an outcome frankly socialistic.” John Graham Brooks.
| + | Atlan. 99: 279. F. ’07. 580w. | |
| N. Y. Times. 11: 119. F. 24, ’06. 110w. |
MacKaye, James. Politics of utility: the technology of happiness—applied: being book 3 of “The economy of happiness.” **50c. Little.
6–37899.
Descriptive note in Annual, 1906.
“The book is well written and contains some very incisive criticisms of modern society, and several interesting economic distinctions and theories, but on the whole, it can be fairly said that the average thinker would find difficulty in seeing just where the proposed scheme differs from modern socialism.”
| + − | Ann. Am. Acad. 29: 641. My. ’07. 250w. | |
| Ind. 62: 102. Ja. 10, ’07. 80w. | ||
| J. Pol. Econ. 15: 313. My. ’07. 140w. | ||
| + | N. Y. Times. 12: 45. Ja. 26, ’07. 120w. | |
| Spec. 98: 1007. Je. 29, ’07. 230w. |
Mackaye, Percy Wallace. Jeanne d’Arc. *$1.25. Macmillan.
6–35545.
“In constructing his drama Mr. Mackaye has focused the interest upon the child nature of the present heroine—the simplicity that the records abundantly show was hers—and the mystery of power and inspiration behind that simplicity. The contrasting character is the Duc d’Alençon, a skeptic with a rationalism which differs in no essential from that now in vogue.”—N. Y. Times.