Table of Contents

Volume 11, Number 6 · October 10, 1968

Joseph Brodsky, Three Poems by Iosip Brodsky (poem)

Christopher Lasch, Where Do We Go From Here?

Edmund Wilson, The Fruits of the MLA: II. Mark Twain

P.B. Medawar, A Johnsonian Scientist

A.J.P. Taylor, Watching the World Go By

A Diplomat Looks Back by Lewis Einstein

From Prague After Munich by George F. Kennan

Helen Muchnic, Grand Master

The Complete Prose Tales of Alexander Sergeyevitch Pushkin translated by Gillon R. Aitken

Baron Delvig's "Northern Flowers" by John Mercereau Jr.

Pushkin: Death of a Poet by Walter N. Vickery

Pushkin by David Magarshack

Edmund R. Leach, Ignoble Savages

Human Aggression by Anthony Storr

Sanity and Survival: Psychological Aspects of War and Peace by Jerome K. Frank

Non-Violence and Aggression: A Study of Gandhi's Moral Equivalent of War by H.J.N. Horsburgh

Violence in the Streets edited by Shalom Endleman

War: The Anthropology of Armed Conflict and Aggression edited by Morton Fried, edited by Marvin Harris, edited by Robert Murphy

Jack Richardson, The Trouble I've Seen

A Mass for the Dead by William Gibson

The Terrorized by Harry Roskolenko

When I Was Last on Cherry Street by Harry Roskolenko

Wassily Leontief, Bigger or Better?

Perspectives on Economic Growth edited by Walter Heller

D.J. Enright, Days of Marvelous Lays

A Personal Matter by Oë, Kenzaburo, Translated from the Japanese by John Nathan

The Pornographers by Akiyuki Nozaka, Translated from the Japanese by Michael Gallagher

Jason Epstein, The Brooklyn Dodgers


Letters

J.C. Maxwell, Lawrence Stone, Charte De Nanterre
Arthur I. Waskow, Protest
Irving Ribner, Herbert Weisinger, Daley's Loss



Contributors

Joseph Brodsky was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1987. His Collected Poems in English will be published next spring. He died in 1996. (January 2000)

D. J. Enright's books include The Alluring Problem, Fields of Vision, Collected Poems 1948—1998, and, most recently, Interplay: A Kind of Commonplace Book. (August 2000)

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

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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