Ernst Gombrich, The Mystery of Leonardo
Leonardo da Vinci on Painting: A Lost Book (Libro A) reassembled, translated, and edited by Carlo Pedretti, with a Foreword by Sir Kenneth Clark
Leonardo da Vinci and a Memory of His Childhood by Sigmund Freud, translated by Alan Tyson
Stuart Hampshire, Friend to Freud
The Freud Journal of Lou Andreas-Salome translated by Stanley A. Leavy
D.J. Enright, Artist Into Beggar
The Clown by Heinrich Böll, translated by Leila Vennewitz
Laura Carper, The Need for Negro Politics
The Seeds of Destruction by Thomas Merton
SNCC: The New Abolitionists by Howard Zinn
My Face Is Black by C. Eric Lincoln
Who Speaks for the South by James McBride Dabbs
Roger Shattuck, Baudelaire as Critic
Baudelaire as a Literary Critic translated and edited by Lois Boe Hyslop, by Francis E. Hyslop Jr.
The Painter of Modern Life and Other Essays by Charles Baudelaire, translated and edited by Jonathan Mayne
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Left Field
Red Pawn: The Story of Noel Field by Flora Lewis
Bernard Bergonzi, In Pursuit of Doris Lessing
Children of Violence by Doris Lessing
J.H. Plumb, Burke and His Cult
Burke and the Nature of Politics by Carl B. Cone
Hilton Kramer, The Hartford Retreat
Art or Anarchy? by Huntington Hartford
Roland Oliver, Being Black
The Importance of Being Black by Frank Moraes
Political Parties in French Speaking West Africa by Ruth Schachter Morgenthau
African Socialism edited by William H. Friedland, edited by Carl G. Rosberg Jr.
J.H. Elliott, The Faces of Spain
The Presence of Spain by James Morris, photographs by Evelyn Hofer
An Explanation of Spain by Eléna de La Souchère
Clancy Sigal, Workers of the World
Rebel Voices: An IWW Anthology edited by Joyce L. Kornbiun
Nathan P. Glazer, Paul Goodman, Berkeley: An Exchange
Professor Sir Ernst Gombrich OM was born in Vienna in 1909 and died in London on November 3, 2001, aged 92. He studied at the Theresianum and then at the Second Institute of Art History at the University of Vienna under Julius von Schlosser (1928-33). He then worked as a Research Assistant and collaborator with the museum curator and Freudian analyst Ernst Kris. He joined the Warburg Institute in London as a Research Assistant in 1936. During World War 2 he was employed by the BBC as a Radio Monitor. After the war he rejoined the Warburg Institute eventually becoming its Director in 1959. His major publications include The Story of Art (1950), Art and Illusion: A Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Representation (1960), Aby Warburg: An Intellectual Biography (1970), The Sense of Order: A Study in the Psychology of Decorative Art. (Also see: www.gombrich.co.uk.)