cover image Toward What Bright Glory?

Toward What Bright Glory?

Allen Drury. William Morrow & Company, $22.95 (527pp) ISBN 978-0-688-07713-6

Drury's 17th novel is a long, long book, a fact that will be painfully obvious to those who plod through to the end. The story is set at Stanford University during the 1938-1939 academic year, and there are a plethora of formulaic characters and situations that portend all the issues of the latter two-thirds of the 20th century. Members of the fraternity house which serves as the focal point for the story include the president of the student body (the central male character), one suicidal manic-depressive, one incipient Nazi, one concerned Jewish student deeply aware of the threat Hitler presents, one dumb but lovable football player, one pleasant but bigoted-by-birth Southern white (crucial to an unlikely subplot involving the university's first black student) and at least two closet homosexuals. When introducing each new character, Drury ``quotes'' from the notes of the fraternity's budding novelist, notes that conveniently sum up the newcomer's nature, background and place in the grand scheme of things. There are some saving graces--the protagonist is not quite perfect, with a nice touch of arrogance that slightly humanizes him; and many readers will be surprised by which of the two women in his life finally gets the ring--but, overall, the book is a dreary bore. (July)