Table of Contents

Volume 4, Number 12 · July 15, 1965

Edmund Wilson, The Strange Case of Pushkin and Nabokov

Eugene Onegin Volume IV, v + 316 A Novel in Verse by Alexandr Pushkin, Translated from the Russian, with a commentary, by Vladimir Nabokov

Alfred Kazin, The Bridge

Brooklyn Bridge: Fact and Symbol by Alan Trachtenberg

Ronald Steel, Up the Doomsday Ladder

On Escalation—Metaphors and Scenarios by Herman Kahn

Nuclear War: The Impending Strategic Deadlock by Neville Brown

Dwight MacDonald, A Day at the White House

D.P. Walker, The Old Black Magic

The World of the Witches by Julio Caro Baroja, translated by O.N.V. Glendinning

Richard Ellmann, Dangerous Acquaintances

Arthur Symons: A Critical Biography by Roger Lhombreaud

Walter Laqueur, Russia in Wartime

Russia At War 1941-1945 by Alexander Werth

Barbarossa: The Russian-German Conflict 1941-1945 by Alan Clark

The War: 1941-1945 by Ilya Ehrenburg

George Lichtheim, Restoring Hegel

Hegel: Reinterpretations, Texts, and Commentary by Walter Kaufmann


Letters

Marius Bewley, Dame Edith
Barbara Guest, Dame Edith
Joseph Sampiere, Dame Edith
Howard Gardner, Erik Erikson
Oliver Stallybrass, D.J. Enright, Si ti uoy?



Contributors

Alfred Kazin's most recent book is God and the American Writer. (April 1998)

Ronald Steel is Professor of International Relations at the University of Southern California, a recent fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, and the author of biographies of Walter Lippmann and Robert Kennedy. (June 2006)

Edmund Wilson (1895-1972) is widely regarded as the preeminent American man of letters of the twentieth century. Over his long career, he wrote for Vanity Fair, helped edit The New Republic, served as chief book critic for The New Yorker, and was a frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books. Wilson was the author of more than twenty books, including Axel's Castle, Patriotic Gore, and a work of fiction, Memoirs of Hecate County.


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