Table of Contents

Volume 25, Number 5 · April 6, 1978

Garry Wills, Heroic Darkness

The Ends of Power by H.R. Haldeman, by Joseph DiMona

With Nixon by Raymond Price

Frank Kermode, Beethoven at Home

Beethoven by Maynard Solomon

Michael Wood, Separating the Chypre from the Ghosts

Eastward Ha! by S.J. Perelman

Irving Howe, Some Romance!

The Romance of American Communism by Vivian Gornick

Karl Miller, The Outlaw

The Life of Dylan Thomas by Paul Ferris

William Shawcross, The Third Indochina War

Communist Party Power in Kampuchea (Cambodia): Documents and Discussion Studies, Cornell University compiled and edited with an introduction by Timothy Michael Carney

Murder of a Gentle Land: The Untold Story of Communist Genocide in Cambodia by John Barron, by Anthony Paul

Cambodia: Starvation and Revolution by George C. Hildebrand, by Gareth Porter

Helen Muchnic, Artist of Nightmare

Andrei Bely: His Life and Works by Konstantin Mochulsky, translated by Nora Szalavitz

Petersburg by Andrei Bely, translated, annotated, and introduced by Robert A. Maguire, by John E. Malmstad

Christopher Hill, The New History of England

Reform and Reformation: England 1509-1558 by G.R. Elton

Stability and Strife: England 1714-1760 by W.A. Speck

James Wolcott, TV Guide

Television: The First Fifty Years by Jeff Greenfield

Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television by Jerry Mander

The Sponsor: Notes on a Modern Potentate by Erik Barnouw

Remote Control by Frank Mankiewicz, by Joel Swerdlow

Stuart Hampshire, A Daemon at Oxford

Missing Persons: An Autobiography by E.R. Dodds

C.L. Barber, 'Full to Overflowing'

Shakespeare's Sonnets edited with analytic commentary by Stephen Booth

Hillel Halkin, Leon Wieseltier, Bernard Avishai, An Exchange on Zionism


Letters

Murray Bookchin, Raymond Carr, All or Nothing
Daniel Callahan, Worried Scientists
David L. Simpson, Irvin Ehrenpreis, Eliot's 'Headland'



Contributors

Stuart Hampshire, formerly Warden of Wardham College, Oxford, is the author of Spinoza and Justice Is Conflict.(October 2002)

Frank Kermode lives in Cambridge, England. His most recent book is The Age of Shakespeare. (October 2008)

William Shawcross is the author of several books on Cambodia. (December 1996)

Garry Wills was born in Atlanta, Georgia. One of our most distinguished historians and critics, he is the author of numerous books, including Saint Augustine, Papal Sin, and the Pulitzer Prize–winning Lincoln at Gettysburg. He has won many other awards, among them two National Book Critics Circle Awards and the 1998 National Medal for the Humanities. He is currently Professor of History Emeritus at Northwestern University. A regular contributor to the New York Review of Books, he lives in Evanston, Illinois.

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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