“…According to Foley, proletarian writers were not prescribed to write in a didactic, formulaic way by the Communist party, but were generally concerned with the working‐class experience and “fidelity to detail, especially with regard to work processes” (Foley, 1993, 111). In Brand's first four novels, Outward Room (1937), The Heroes (1939), Albert Sears (1947), and Some Love, Some Hunger (1955), he devotes ample narrative space to describing his characters at work in factories and in cramped, noisy apartments.…”