Table of Contents

Volume 18, Number 2 · February 10, 1972

Nigel Dennis, I Bite Everywhere

Guignol's Band by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, translated by Bernard Frechtman, translated by Jack T. Nile

Voyeur Voyant by Erika Ostrovsky

Castle to Castle by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, translated by Ralph Manheim

North by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, translated by Ralph Manheim

I.F. Stone, I. F. Stone Reports: Betrayal by Psychiatry

Let History Judge by Roy A. Medvedev

A Question of Madness by Zhores Medvedev, by Roy Medvedev

A Chronicle of Current Events Republished in English by Amnesty International Publications, Turnagain Lane, Farringdon St., London EC4, England Journal of the Soviet Human Rights Movement

A.J.P. Taylor, Through the Keyhole

Codeword: "Direktor" by Heinz Höhne

The London Journals of General Raymond E. Lee 1940-1941 edited by James Lenze

The Game of the Foxes by Ladislas Farago

The Double-Cross System by J.C. Masterman

Philip Rahv, Henry James and his Cult

Henry James: The Master, 1901-1916 by Leon Edel

Noel Annan, The Goat

Lloyd George: A Diary by Frances Stevenson, edited by A.J.P. Taylor

Edmund Wilson, The Monsters of Bomarzo

Christopher Lasch, The Good Old Days

Facing Life: Youth and the Family in American History by Oscar Handlin, by Mary F. Handlin

Ellen Moers, Women's Liberator

Samuel Richardson: A Biography by T.C. Duncan Eaves, by Ben D. Kimpel

Charles Rosen, Music to Compose By

Boulez on Music Today by Pierre Boulez, translated by Susan Bradshaw, translated by Richard Rodney Bennett

Uri Davis, Atallah Mansour, An Exchange on Israel and the Palestinians


Letters

Paul Goodman, Edgar Z. Friedenberg, A Matter of Urgency
Ivan Morris, Gore Vidal, Setting It Straight
Burton Raffel, F.W. Bateson, Beowulf in America



Contributors

Noel Annan is the author of Leslie Stephen and Our Age, among other books. (October 1999)

Charles Rosen's most recent book is Piano Notes: The World of the Pianist. (February 2008)

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.


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