Table of Contents

Volume 4, Number 10 · June 17, 1965

Irving Howe, I'd Rather Be Wrong

The Johnson Treatment by Jack Bell

W.S. Merwin, A Debt (poem)

Hannah Arendt, The Christian Pope

Journal of a Soul by Pope John XXIII, translated by Dorothy White

Hilton Kramer, Backward and Downward with the Arts

The Bride and the Bachelors by Calvin Tomkins

Morton White, Rites of Passage

Coming of Age in America by Edgar Z. Friedenberg

Walter Laqueur, Nazis

Goebbels and National Socialist Propaganda 1925-1945 by Ernest K. Bramsted

Himmler by Roger Manvell, by Heinrich Fraenkel

The Track of the Wolf: Essays on National Socialism and its Leader, Adolf Hitler by James H. McRandle

Christopher Ricks, Domestic Manners

The Man Who Loved Children by Christina Stead, Introduction by Randall Jarrell

The Fetish and Other Stories by Alberto Moravia, translated by Angus Davidson

Martin Bernal, Down There on a Visit

Report from a Chinese Village by Jan Myrdal

Noel Annan, A Long Distance Runner

A Cornishman at Oxford by A.L. Rowse

Frank Kermode, The Old Amalaki

Ramakrishna and His Disciples by Christopher Isherwood

Wylie Sypher, Art and Revolution

The Idea of Art as Propaganda in France, 1750-1799 by James A. Leith

The Invention of Liberty, 1700-1789 by Jean Starobinski, translated by Bernard C. Swift

Geoffrey Barraclough, Out of Eden

The Reckoning by Anthony Eden

Robert Mazzocco, Ach!

The Giant Dwarfs by Gisela Elsner

Obstacles by Reinhard Lettau

Soul of Wood by Jakov Lind

J.P. Kenyon, Habsburg Espionage

The Secret Diplomacy of the Habsburgs, 1598-1625 by Charles Howard Carter


Letters

Max Geltman, George Lichtheim, Marx's Ghostwriter
Emma Claude Coburn, Montgomery Jail
Gail Schlegel, Erikson
J.M. Hinton, Overstatement?



Contributors

Noel Annan is the author of Leslie Stephen and Our Age, among other books. (October 1999)

Frank Kermode lives in Cambridge, England. His most recent book is The Age of Shakespeare. (October 2008)

W.S. Merwin was born in New York City in 1927 and grew up in Union City, New Jersey, and in Scranton, Pennsylvania. From 1949 to 1951 he worked as a tutor in France, Portugal, and Majorca. He has since lived in many parts of the world, most recently on Maui in the Hawaiian Islands. He is the author of many books of poems, prose, and translations and has received both the Pulitzer and the Bollingen Prizes for poetry, among numerous other awards.

Christopher Ricks is William M. and Sara B. Warren Professor of the Humanities and Co-Director of the Editorial Institute at Boston University, and Professor of Poetry at Oxford. His most recent book is Dylan’s Visions of Sin. (March 2008)


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