Table of Contents

Volume 19, Number 8 · November 16, 1972

Stephen Spender, The Truth about Orwell

The Unknown Orwell by Peter Stansky, by William Abrahams

George Orwell by Raymond Williams

The Road to Wigan Pier by George Orwell

Richard Murphy, Firebug (poem)

John Gittings, A Shameful Tale

Dragon by the Tail: American, British, Japanese, and Russian Encounters with China and One Another by John Paton Davies Jr.

Michael Wood, Tender Trousers

Transparent Things by Vladimir Nabokov

Richard J. Barnet, Nixon's Plan to Save the World

Open Secret: The Kissinger-Nixon Doctrine in Asia edited by Virginia Brodine, edited by Mark Selden

War Without End: American Planning for the Next Vietnams by Michael Klare

Army in Anguish by Haynes Johnson, by George C. Wilson

Frederick C. Crews, Uplift

The Breast by Philip Roth

Mikhail Agursky, Selling Anti-Semitism in Moscow

Caution, Zionism!: Essays on the Ideology, Organization and Practice of Zionism by Yuri Ivanov

Harold Acton, Bird or Devil?

Corvo: Saint or Madman? by Donald Weeks

Geoffrey Barraclough, A New View of German History: Part III

The Failure of Illiberalism by Fritz Stern

Monroe K. Spears, You Makin' Sense

Black Jargon in White America by David Claerbaut

Black English: Its History and Usage in the United States by J.L. Dillard

Edgar Z. Friedenberg, Schools for Scandal

Black Mountain: An Exploration in Community by Martin Duberman

Educational Commune: The Story of Commonwealth College by Raymond Koch, by Charlotte Koch

Frederick Seidel, What One Must Contend With (poem)

Max Gluckman, A Band Wagonload of Monkeys

The Imperial Animal by Lionel Tiger, by Robin Fox


Letters

Nina Parris, Lewis Mumford, Eakins's Exposure



Contributors

Frederick Crews's most recent book is Follies of the Wise: Dissenting Essays. (December 2007)

Richard Murphy's most recent books are Collected Poems and The Kick: A Life Among Writers. (February 2004)

Frederick Seidel's latest collection, Ooga-Booga, received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for poetry. (September 2007)

Michael Wood is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Princeton. His most recent book is Literature and the Taste of Knowledge. (April 2008)


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