Table of Contents

Volume 14, Number 6 · March 26, 1970

Jack Richardson, Master Builder

One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez, translated by Gregory Rabassa

Frances FitzGerald, Vietnam: The Future

Edmund Wilson, On "All Men Are Mad"

Elinor Langer, The Women of the Telephone Company

Jean-Paul Sartre, An Interview with Sartre

Helen Muchnic, A Somber Theater

The Love-Girl and the Innocent by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, translated by Nicholas Bethell, translated by David Burg

Five Plays of Alexander Ostrovsky translated and edited by Eugene K. Bristow

The Complete Plays of Vladimir Mayakovsky translated by Guy Daniels

The Blind Beauty by Boris Pasternak, translated by Manya Harari, translated by Max Hayward

The Trilogy of Alexander Sukhovo-Kobylin translated by Harold B. Segel

Meyerhold on Theatre translated and edited by Edward Braun

Notes of a Director by Alexander Tairov, translated by William Kuhlke

I.A. Richards, For Conrad Aiken's Ninety-Ninth Birthday (poem)

Paul Goodman, Notes of a Neolithic Conservative

Alberto Moravia, Dreaming Up Petronius

Fellini Satyricon directed by Federico Fellini, produced by Alberto Grimaldi

D.J. Enright, Germanics

Rosshalde by Hermann Hesse, translated by Ralph Manheim

Children Are Civilians Too by Heinrich Böll, translated by Leila Vennewitz

Bodies and Shadows by Peter Weiss, translated by E.B. Garside, translated by Rosemarie Waldrop

R.C. Smail, Below the Boot

A History of Sicily: Ancient Sicily to the Arab Conquest by M.I. Finley

Medieval Sicily: 800-1713 and Medieval Sicily: After 1713 by Denis Mack Smith


Letters

Eugen Loebl, Hans J. Morgenthau, Czechslovakia
Columbia Law School Student Senate, Resolution
Jane Jacobs, Hot Water
E.V. Walter, Resisting



Contributors

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)

Frances FitzGerald's books include Way Out There in the Blue: Reagan, Star Wars, and the End of the Cold War. (November 2008)

Alberto Moravia (1907-1990), the child of a wealthy family, was raised at home because of illness. He published his first novel, The Time of Indifference, at the age of twenty-three. Banned from publishing under Mussolini, he emerged after World War II as one of the most admired and influential twentieth-century Italian writers.

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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