Table of Contents

Volume 23, Number 8 · May 13, 1976

Hugh Trevor-Roper, Superagent

A Man Called Intrepid: The Secret War by William Stevenson

Robert Lowell, On Hannah Arendt

V.S. Naipaul, The Wounds of India

Michael Wood, The Struggles of T.S. Eliot

The Overwhelming Question: A Study of the Poetry of T. S. Eliot by Balachandra Rajan

The Classic: Literary Images of Permanence and Change by Frank Kermode

Selected Prose of T.S. Eliot edited with an introduction by Frank Kermode

T. S. Eliot by Stephen Spender

J.M. Cameron, Sex in the Head

From Machismo to Mutuality: Essays on Sexism and Woman-Man Liberation by Eugene C. Bianchi, by Rosemary Radford Ruether

My Secret Garden: Women's Sexual Fantasies compiled by Nancy Friday

Binding with Briars: Sex and Sin in the Catholic Church by Richard Ginder

Sexual Behavior in the 1970s by Morton Hunt

The Modernization of Sex by Paul Robinson

The Homosexual Matrix by C. A. Tripp

Noble Lovers by D.D.R. Owen

Kevin Buckley, Under Westy's Eyes

A Soldier Reports by General William C. Westmoreland

Soldiers in Revolt: The American Military Today by David Cortright

Geoffrey Barraclough, The Haves and the Have Nots

Robert Craft, Der Rosenkavalier: 'Something Mozartian'?

Leon Wieseltier, A Man for the Hour

The Worm of Consciousness and Other Essays by Nicola Chiaromonte, edited by Miriam Chiaromonte, introduction by Mary McCarthy


Letters

Nina Baym, Terror in the Catskills
Michael Novak, Melt That Pot
Thomas H. Pauly, Richard Ellmann, Terror in the Catskills
Adaljiza Sosaz Riddell, Andrew Hacker, Melt That Pot
C. David Heymann, Donald Davie, For the Record



Contributors

Robert Craft was awarded the International Prix du Disque at the Cannes Music Festival for 2002.(May 2002)

Robert Lowell died in 1977. His Collected Poems was published this summer. The letters in this issue will be included in The Letters of Robert Lowell, edited by Saskia Hamilton, to be published next year by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC. (November 2003)

V. S. Naipaul was born in Trinidad in 1932 and emigrated to England in 1950, when he won a scholarship to University College, Oxford. He is the author of many novels, including A House for Mr. Biswas, A Bend in the River, and In a Free State, which won the Booker Prize. He has also written several nonfiction works based on his travels, including India: A Million Mutinies Now and Beyond Belief: Islamic Excursions Among the Converted Peoples. He was knighted in 1990 and in 1993 was the first recipient of the David Cohen British Literature Prize.

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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