Table of Contents

Volume 6, Number 6 · April 14, 1966

W.H. Auden, The Poetry of Andrei Voznesensky

Patricia Blake, Max Hayward, Andrei Voznesensky, Five Poems by Andrei Voznesensky (poem)

John Holt, A Little Learning

Toward a Theory of Instruction by Jerome Bruner

I.F. Stone, The Brink

The Missile Crisis by Elie Abel

Pearl Chang, O Dear

Story of O by Pauline Réage, translated by Sabine d'Estrée

Denis Donoghue, The Long Poem

Wildtrack by John Wain

Rivers and Mountains by John Ashbery

The War of the Secret Agents, and Other Poems by Henri Coulette

Nights and Days by James Merrill

I.A. Richards, Growing Pains

General Linguistics: An Introductory Survey by R.H. Robins

The Linguistic Sciences and Language Teaching by M.A.K. Halliday, by Angus McIntosh, by Peter Strevens

Michael Field, Chock Full of Nuts

The American Heritage Cookbook by the Editors of American Heritage

Harvest of American Cooking by Mary Margaret McBride

Helen Brown's West Coast Cook Book

The Chamberlain Sampler of American Cooking by Narcisse Chamberlain, by Narcissa G. Chamberlain

Gavin de Beer, In the Genes

New Paths in Biology by Adolf Portmann

John Shearman, A Buyer's Market

Giotto: The Peruzzi Chapel by Leonetto Tintori, by Eve Borsook

Vitale da Bologna and Bolognese Painting in the Fourteenth Century by Cesare Gnudi, translated by Olga Ragusa

Michelangelo by Frederick Hartt

Italian Primitives: Panel Painting of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries by Enzo Carli, translated by Olga Ragusa


Letters

Ingo Seidler, Philippa Foot, Unscrupulous Sister
Edmund Wilson, Bookmaking
Arnold T. Schwab, James Gibbons Huneker
Barbara Tuchman, James Joll, Neglecting Freud



Contributors

W. H. Auden (1907–1973) was born in North Yorkshire, England, the son of a doctor. He studied at Oxford and published his first book, Poems, in 1930, immediately establishing himself as one of the outstanding voices of his generation. Auden emigrated to New York in 1939, where he became a US citizen and converted to Anglicanism. He wrote essays, critical studies, plays, and opera librettos for such composers as Benjamin Britten, Igor Stravinsky, and Hans Werner Henze, as well as the poems for which he is most famous.

Denis Donoghue is University Professor at NYU, where he holds the Henry James Chair of English and American Letters. He is the author of The Practice of Reading, Words Alone: The Poet T.S. Eliot, and, most recently, The American Classics. (October 2006)

I.F. Stone was an American journalist, publisher of I.F. Stone's Weekly, and a regular contributor to the Review. For more about him please visit www.ifstone.org.


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