Table of Contents

Volume 15, Number 10 · December 3, 1970

Alfred Kazin, Though He Slay Me…

Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow

Edmund Wilson, Notes on Pushkin

C. Vann Woodward, Richard Hofstadter, 1916–1970

Willie Lee Rose, Killing for Freedom

To Purge This Land With Blood: A Biography of John Brown by Stephen B. Oates

The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass Edited and Abridged by Genevieve S. Gray

Frederick Douglass by Philip S. Foner

John Brown: The Making of a Revolutionary Edited and Introduced by Louis Ruchames

Frederick Douglass by Benjamin Quarles, Preface by James McPherson

Black Abolitionists by Benjamin Quarles

My Bondage and My Freedom by Frederick Douglass, Introduction by Philip Foner

Margot Hentoff, Unbuckled

The Governor Listeth by William F. Buckley Jr.

Ivan Illich, Schooling: The Ritual of Progress

Jean Stafford, Birdbath

A White House Diary by Lady Bird Johnson

A Woman of Quality: Eleanor Roosevelt by Stella K. Hershan

Jaime Sabines, I Don't Know for Certain… (poem)

I.F. Stone, Fabricated Evidence in the Kent State Killings

C.B.A. Behrens, The Coming of Capitalism

From Calvin to Rousseau by Herbert Lüthy, translated by Salvator Attanasio

Eugene D. Genovese, A Special Supplement: American Slaves and Their History

Martin Bernal, Was Chinese Communism Inevitable?

While China Faced West by James C. Thomson Jr.

I.A. Richards, Jesus' Other Life

The Brook Kerith, A Syrian Story by George Moore

Theodore H. Draper, Eric Foner, Exchange on Black Nationalism


Letters

Nathan P. Glazer, Jose Yglesias, Uruguay Primer
Nancy Milford, Dr. Bleuler's Diagnosis
Mary Meigs, D.A.N. Jones, Exorcising Demons
Alan J. Arikian, It Was Morse
Shane Stevens, The Berrigans
Virginia I. Douglas, Hyperkinetic Kids (cont'd)
Frank Vergata, Amnesty International
Paul Mayer, The Berrigans



Contributors

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

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.

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.

C. Vann Woodward is Sterling Professor of History Emeritus at Yale. His many books include Mary Chesnut's Civil War and The Old World's New World. (February 1998)


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