Table of Contents

Volume 23, Number 17 · October 28, 1976

Irvin Ehrenpreis, Lowell's Comedy

Selected Poems by Robert Lowell

Christopher Lasch, Planned Obsolescence

Passages: Predictable Crises of Adult Life by Gail Sheehy

V.S. Naipaul, India: Paradise Lost

John H. Schaar, Getting Religion

A Nation of Behavers by Martin E. Marty

The Evangelicals: What They Believe, Who They Are, Where They Are Changing edited by David F. Wells, edited by John D. Woodbridge

The New Religious Consciousness edited by Charles Y. Glock, edited by Robert N. Bellah

Reza Baraheni, Terror in Iran

Reza Baraheni, Two Poems (poem)

Mort Rosenblum, Terror in Argentina

C. Vann Woodward, The Promise of Populism

Democratic Promise: The Populist Moment in America by Lawrence Goodwyn

Karl Miller, Orphans and Oracles: What Clara Knew

The Widow's Children by Paula Fox

Lady Oracle by Margaret Atwood

Leon Wieseltier, You Don't Have to Be Khazarian…

The Thirteenth Tribe: The Khazar Empire and Its Heritage by Arthur Koestler

Pierre Boulez, Mahler Now

Aileen Kelly, Lessons of Kropotkin

Kropotkin by Martin A. Miller

The Essential Kropotkin edited by Emile Capouya, edited by Keitha Tompkins


Letters

James W. Earl, Plastic Fiction
Mark S. Wittenberg, An Artist in Prison
Paul Illert, Gore Vidal, Plastic Fiction
Name Withheld, Plastic Fiction



Contributors

Aileen Kelly, a fellow of King’s College, Cambridge, is the author of Toward Another Shore: Russian Thinkers Between Necessity and Chance and, most recently, Views from the Other Shore: Essays on Herzen, Chekhov, and Bakhtin. (April 2007)

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.

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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