comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1931-11-28 · page 2 of 36

Judge — November 28, 1931 — page 2: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — November 28, 1931 — page 2: Judge, 1931-11-28

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page is primarily **a book advertisement**, not political satire. It promotes *"Larry: Thoughts of Youth,"* a posthumous publication of letters and diary entries from Larry, a Lafayette College student who died suddenly. The marketing emphasizes Larry's everyman appeal: he was athletic, irreverent toward authority, drank and fought, yet morally earnest—a "boy as almost all mothers and fathers want their sons to be." Contemporary critics praised it as authentic youth commentary. The advertisement targets parents and families, positioning the book as essential reading that candidly reveals modern college student life. The dramatic "rode into the sunset—never to return" framing romanticizes the deceased author, marketing his tragic early death as adding poignancy to his genuine voice. This reflects early-20th-century publishing trends valorizing authentic youth narratives.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

THOUGHTS OF ¥ The Critics say: “All parents and all youth may profit. by his story."—The Literary Digest. ‘This departed college boy un- consciously penned) an epic when he scratched in his diary nearly ten years ago."— Brooklyn Citizen, “One of the most outstanding volumes ever written for help- ing parents understand their children.” — Harry Emerson Wildes, Philadelphia Public Ledger. @ “A clear-thinking, rugged op- timist, imbued with an enthu- siastic love of living."—N, York Sun. e “A thoroughly sterling work expounding the life of a fine upstanding American youth of magnificent promise.”"—Dr. S. Parkes Cadman. “One of the finest and clearest revelations of the essential spirit of youth that I know— like a fresh, clear breeze— genius of insight—expression —friendshi —Dean Luther Weigle, Yale University. ouTH- Larry rode into the sunset --never to return and a new “Best Seller” was born... LARRY was a student at Lafayette College. This remarkable human document consists of his letters, diary and personal philosophy—all written with no thought of publication and never revised, for he was killed suddenly. Not fiction, but the true diary and letters of a modern college student— so frank, unspoiled and revealing that after Larry's death his parents and friends were persuaded to share his thoughts with other boys and girls and with all other parents. Narrow modernists may get Larry wrong because he did not smoke or drink and was active in the Y and the church. But Larry was no prig. He hit hard in football. He was a leader of men, brave, gay and tolerant. He put drunken classmates to bed and never preached at them. He laughed down an “anti-necking society He punched cows and broke his own bronco. He lived gloriously and died with his boots on. afford to miss. Every Mother and Father—Daughter and Son Should Read This Book LARRY: THOUGHTS OF YOUTH LARRY was published last Christmas. Little was heard of it then in literary columns or in bookstores. There was no ballyhoo—very few reviews—only the most casual mention in various large newspapers. But LARRY began to sell: at first only a few copies a week, then a few hundred. Dr. Cadman and Dr. Poling praised LARRY—over three thousand copies were sold that month. One evening Lowell Thomas mentioned LARRY on the radio; that same week The Literary Digest de- voted two pages to it. The publishers found they were out of stock. In the month of June LARRY appeared on the national Best Seller list, and six thousand people bought a new “best seller.” Such has been the remarkable sales record of LARRY: a story so human and appealing that this “phenomenal book” (Retail Bookseller) is now in its 5th printing (36th to 45th thousand ). for 7 The John Day Co., Dept. J, 386 Fourth Avenue, New York Gentlemen: Please send (M6 ss cs vcs youseay COP! swiss sansa vows OF LARRY: Thoughts of Youth, price $1.25. Enclosed please find ..............4% ! | ! | | | : ! ! ' ! 1 1 ! | | L comicbooks.com