Table of Contents

Volume 1, Number 3 · September 26, 1963

Susan Sontag, The Ideal Husband

Notebooks, 1935-42 by Albert Camus, Translated from the French by Philip Thody

Malcolm Muggeridge, Peacemeal

Unarmed Victory by Bertrand Russell

R.P. Blackmur, Jacobiting

Henry James and the Jacobites by Maxwell Geismar

George Lichtheim, The Eichmann Question

The Capture and Trial of Adolf Eichmann by Moishe Pearlman

Robert Oppenheimer, The Fire Next Time

The Dawn of a New Age by Eugene Rabinowitch

Saul Bellow, Barefoot Boy

A Precocious Autobiography by Yevgeny Yevtushenko, translated by Andrew R. MacAndrew

W.V. Quine, Magna Carta

National Geographic Atlas of the World

Irving Howe, An American Tragedy

Power, Politics and People by C. Wright Mills, edited by Irving Louis Horowitz

Raoul Marx, Poets at Home

Modern Poets edited by John Malcolm, edited by Brinnin Reed, edited by Bill Reed

Richard H. Rovere, Parti Pris

The Essential Lippmann edited by Clinton Rossiter, edited by James Lare

Leonard Schapiro, Inside the Whale

How Russia Is Ruled by Merle Fainsod

The New Face of Soviet Totalitarianism by Adam B. Ulam

The Future of Russia by Harry Braverman

Jason Epstein, Wasteland

Night Comes to the Cumberlands…… by Harry Caudill

Irving Singer, Marble Faun

Santayana: The Later Years by Daniel Cory

Julian Moynahan, Body & Soul

The Learning Tree by Gordon Parks

Randall Jarrell, Two Poems (poem)

Julian Moynahan, Body & Soul

Flesh by Brigid Brophy

Mark DeWolfe Howe, Legal Lights

The Occasions of Justice: Essays Mostly on Law by Charles L. Black Jr.

Perspectives in Constitutional Law by Charles L. Black Jr.

William Styron, Overcome

American Negro Slave Revolts by Herbert Aptheker

Jackson Mathews, A New Tartuffe

Moliere's Tartuffe translated by Richard Wilbur

Edgar Z. Friedenberg, Lower-Middle Classroom

The Education of American Teachers by James B. Conant

Xavier Prynne, The Gang



Contributors

Jason Epstein was for many years editorial director of Random House and has written on food for various publications. (March 2008)

Randall Jarrell (1914-1965) was born in Tennessee and graduated from Vanderbilt. A poet, novelist, translator, and critic as well as writer for children, Jarrell was a prolific author whose best-known works include the poems collected in The Woman at the Washington Zoo and The Lost World, the academic comedy Pictures from an Institution, the children's story The Bat Poet, and Poetry and the Age, a group of essays. An influential critic who, as poetry reviewer for The Nation, helped to launch the careers of Robert Lowell and other contemporaries, Jarrell taught for many years at the University of North Carolina, where he was much revered. He died in a car accident in 1965.

Julian Moynahan is Professor of English Emeritus at Rutgers University. His most recent book is Anglo-Irish: The Literary Imagination in a Hyphenated Culture. (May 2000)

Susan Sontag (1933-2004) was the author of four novels, The Benefactor, Death Kit, The Volcano Lover, and In America, which won the 2000 National Book Award for Fiction; a collection of stories, I, Etcetera; several plays, including Alice in Bed and Lady from the Sea; and seven works of nonfiction, among them Where the Stress Falls and Regarding the Pain of Others. Her books have been translated into thirty-two languages. In 2001, she was awarded the Jerusalem Prize for the body of her work; in 2003, she received the Prince of Asturias Prize for Literature and the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade.


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