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Carlos Fuentes
A Life
Pedro Martinez: A Mexican Peasant and His Family by Oscar Lewis, Drawings by Alberto Beltrán
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Frank Kermode
Lear at Lincoln Center
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Marianne Moore
On Wallace Stevens
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Walter Laqueur
Hitler and the Catholics
The Catholic Church and Nazi Germany by Guenter Lewy
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Michael Meyer
Ibsen in His Letters
Ibsen: Letters and Speeches edited by Evert Sprinchorn
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Gertrude Himmelfarb
A Forgotten Worthy
James Anthony Froude: A Biography by Waldo Hilary Dunn
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Stanley Kauffmann
Traveling Light
Both Sides of the Ocean by Viktor Nekrasov
Robert Frost in Russia by F.D. Reeve
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Hans Meyerhoff
Psychiatry After Freud
The Vital Balance by Karl Menninger, by Martin Mayman, by Paul Pruyser
The Revolution in Psychiatry by Ernest Becker
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R.W. Flint
Recent Poetry: Three American Poets
The Wreck of the Thresher by William Meredith
Helmets by James Dickey
Flower Herding on Mount Monadnock by Galway Kinnell
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G. S Fraser
Three British Poets
Requiem for the Living by C. Day Lewis
Selected Poems by Stevie Smith
The Place’s Fault, and Other Poems by Philip Hobsbaum
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Paul Goodman
O’Hare Airport (poem)
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John Clive
Noble Failure
Rosebery: A Biography of Archibald Philip, Fifth Earl of Rosebery by Robert Rhodes James
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Peter Gay
Napoleon Against Himself
Napoleon by Felix Markham
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Eve Auchincloss
Good Housekeeping
The Keepers of the House by Shirley Ann Grau
Extreme Magic by Hortense Calisher
My Heart Is Broken by Mavis Gallant
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E.J. Hobsbawm
Mysteries of Economic Growth
Economic Growth in France and Britain 1851-1950 by Charles P. Kindleberger
LETTERS
Contributors
Paul Goodman (1911–1972) was an American social critic, psychologist, poet, novelist, and anarchist, whose writings appeared in Politics, Partisan Review, The New Republic, Commentary, The New Leader, Dissent, and The New York Review of Books. He published several well-regarded but little-known books in a variety of fields—including city planning, Gestalt therapy, educational reform, literary criticism, and politics—before Growing Up Absurd, cancelled by its original publisher and turned down by a further eighteen, was brought out by Random House in 1960 and became an instant bestseller. Its author became an influential leader of the New Left and anti-war movements and a model for a new generation of critics like Susan Sontag, who wrote: “There is no living American writer for whom I have left the same simple curiosity to read as quickly as possible anything he wrote on any subject.” “Paul Goodman Changed My Life,” a 2011 documentary directed by Jonathan Lee and distributed by Zeitgeist Films, continues to play at film festivals and independent cinemas. The film received excellent reviews in such publications as The New York Times, Variety, The New York Post, Village Voice, and Time Out New York.


