Table of Contents

Volume 47, Number 13 · August 10, 2000

Russell Baker, A Boy's Life

The Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst by David Nasaw

John Updike, 'Nature Itself'

Chardin 27-September 3, 2000. an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, June, Catalog of the exhibition edited by Pierre Rosenberg, with essays by Rosenberg, Colin B. Bailey, René Démoris, Marie-Laure de Rochebrune and Antoine Schnap

Chardin: An Intimate Art by Hélène Prigent, by Pierre Rosenberg

Lars-Erik Nelson, Party Going

Campaign Talk: Why Elections Are Good for Us by Roderick P. Hart

No Way to Pick a President by Jules Witcover

Charles Rosen, Henri Zerner, Scenes from the American Dream

Norman Rockwell: Pictures for the American People 17- September 24, 2000. by June an exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., Catalog of the exhibition edited by Maureen Hart Hennessey, by Anne Knutson

Tim Judah, Croatia Reborn

Larry McMurtry, Inventing the West

A Newer World: Kit Carson, John C. Frémont, and the Claiming of the American West by David Roberts

The Lives and Legends of Buffalo Bill by Don Russell

Buffalo Bill's Wild West: Celebrity, Memory, and Popular History by Joy S. Kasson

Annie Oakley and Buffalo Bill's Wild West by Isabelle S. Sayers

Will Rogers by Ben Yagoda

The Life and Legacy of Annie Oakley by Glenda Riley

The Real Wild West: The 101 Ranch and the Creation of the American West by Michael Wallis

The Business of Being Buffalo Bill: Selected Letters of William F. Cody, 1879-1917 by Sarah J. Blackstone

Murray Kempton, The Brawls of Yesteryear

Richard Horton, In the Danger Zone

Intensive Care: A Doctor's Journal by John F. Murray

John Bayley, The Greatest!

William Shakespeare: The Man Behind the Genius by Anthony Holden

Shakespeare's Language by Frank Kermode

Jeff Madrick, All Too Human

Irrational Exuberance by Robert J. Shiller

A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton G. Malkiel

Stocks for the Long Run by Jeremy J. Siegel

Dow 36,000 by James K. Glassman, by Kevin A. Hassett

Famous First Bubbles by Peter M. Garber

Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation by Edward Chancellor

Social Security: The Phony Crisis by Dean Baker, by Mark Weisbrot

On Money and Markets: A Wall Street Memoir by Henry Kaufman

John Banville, Coupling

The Married Man by Edmund White

Edmund White: The Burning World by Stephen Barber

The Boy with the Thorn in His Side: A Memoir by Keith Fleming

Gordon A. Craig, Not Wholly Holy

Oberammergau: The Troubling Story of the World's Most Famous Passion Play by James Shapiro

The Passion Play 2000: Oberammergau edited by the Community of Oberammergau, with contributions by Otto Huber and Christian Stückl, photographs by Brigitte Maria Mayer

Alan Ryan, My Way

Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community by Robert D. Putnam

Garry Wills, Fatima: 'The Third Secret'

Charles Simic, On the Night Train

The Weather of Words: Poetic Invention by Mark Strand

Blizzard of One by Mark Strand

Chicken, Shadow, Moon & more by Mark Strand

D.J. Enright, Speaking in Tongues

Destiny by Tim Parks

Adam Zagajewski, My Krakow

Daniel Mendelsohn, The Tale of Two Housmans

The Invention of Love a play by Tom Stoppard, directed by Blanka Ziska. February 9-April 2, 2000, at the Wilma Theater, Philadelphia.

The Invention of Love by Tom Stoppard


Letters

Sadik J. Al-Azm, 'The View from Damascus,' cont'd.
Benjamin Lease, Dorothy Huff Oberhaus, et al. Dickinson's Civil War



Contributors

Russell Baker is a former columnist and correspondent for The New York Times and The Baltimore Sun. His books include The Good Times, Growing Up, and Looking Back.

John Banville was born in Wexford, Ireland, in 1945. He is the author of many novels, including The Book of Evidence, The Untouchable, and Eclipse. Banville's novel The Sea was awarded the 2005 Man Booker Prize. On occasion he writes under the pen name Benjamin Black.

John Bayley has written two books about his wife, the novelist Iris Murdoch, Elegy for Iris and Iris and Her Friends. (July 2004)

Gordon A. Craig is J.E. Wallace Sterling Professor Emeritus of Humanities at Stanford. His latest book is Politics and Culture in Modern Germany. (December 2003)

D. J. Enright's books include The Alluring Problem, Fields of Vision, Collected Poems 1948—1998, and, most recently, Interplay: A Kind of Commonplace Book. (August 2000)

Richard Horton is a physician. He edits The Lancet, a weekly medical journal based in London and New York. He is also a visiting professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Tim Judah is the author of Kosovo: War and Revenge and The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia. He has reported on the Balkans, Afghanistan, Kurdistan, Iraq, and Sudan for The New York Review. (October 2006)

Murray Kempton (1917-1997) was a columnist for Newsday, as well as a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books. His books include Rebellions, Perversities, and Main Events and The Briar Patch, as well as Part of Our Time. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985.

Jeff Madrick is editor of Challenge Magazine, Visiting Professor at Cooper Union, and Senior Fellow at the Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis at the New School. His latest book, The Case for Big Government, was a 2009 PEN Galbraith Award Finalist. (November 2009)

Larry McMurtry is the author of twenty-four novels, including The Last Picture Show, Terms of Endearment, Lonesome Dove, winner of the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and, most recently, Folly and Glory. His nonfiction works include a biography of Crazy Horse, Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen, Paradise, and Sacagawea's Nickname: Essays on the American West (published by New York Review Books). He lives in Archer City, Texas.

Daniel Mendelsohn, a frequent contributor to The New York Review, is the Charles Ranlett Flint Professor of Humanities at Bard. His translations, with commentary, of the Collected Poems and Unfinished Poems of Constantine Cavafy were published earlier this year; a collection of his essays mostly from these pages, How Beautiful It Is and How Easily It Can Be Broken, was just published in paperback.
 (October 2009)

Lars-Erik Nelson (1941-2000) was the Washington columnist for the New York Daily News, and a frequent contributor to the Review.

Charles Rosen's latest book is Piano Notes: The World of the Pianist. (March 2009)

Alan Ryan is Warden of New College, Oxford, and the author of biographies of John Stuart Mill, Bertrand Russell, and John Dewey. (October 2008)

Charles Simic is a poet, essayist and translator. He has published twenty collections of his own poetry, five books of essays, a memoir, and numerous of books of translations. He has received many literary awards for his poems and his translations, including the Pulitzer Prize, the Griffin Prize and the MacArthur Fellowship. Voice at 3 A.M., his selected later and new poems, was published in 2003 and a new book of poems My Noiseless Entourage came out in the spring of 2005.

John Updike was born in 1932 in Shillington, Pennsylvania. In 1954 he began to publish in The New Yorker, where he continued to contribute short stories, poems, and criticism until his death in 2009. His novels have won the Pulitzer Prize, among other awards. His last books were the novel The Widows of Eastwick and Due Considerations, a collection of his essays and criticism.

Garry Wills is Professor of History Emeritus at Northwestern. His most recent book, What Jesus Meant, was published in 2006.

Adam Zagajewski's books include Another Beauty and Without End: New and Selected Poems. The poem in this issue is from his new book, Eternal Enemies, just published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. (April 2008)

Henri Zerner, Professor of History of Art and Architecture at Harvard, is the author, most recently, of Renaissance Art in France: The Invention of Classicism and Écrire l'histoire de l'art: Figures d'une discipline. (January 2005)


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