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TITLE: The Saturday Review of Literature
[Each Saturday Review of Literature issue covers books, arts, literature, movies, ideas, music, science, poetry and much more. Many regular features and writers, and most reviews are also essays on the subject at hand. ALL the latest books had to have an ad in The Saturday Review! ]
ISSUE DATE: May 9, 1964; Vol. XLVII, No. 19
CONDITION: RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8½" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: Member of Japan's rising new generation (See Editorial). Cover photo by N.C.

SR: IDEAS:
Confessions of a Square, by Joseph Wood Krutch.
What the Soviets Read About America, by Edward Wasiolek.
November 22: What Did It Mean? by Elmo Roper.
Japan: Of Dynamo and Destiny: An Editorial.
SR: COMMUNICATIONS:
Two Centuries of the Hartford Courant, by Herbert Brucker.
New Ways to Permanent Files, by Virginius Dabney.
SR: BOOKS: INDEX OF BOOKS REVIEWED:
Literary Horizons: Granville Hicks reviews "A Moveable Feast," by Ernest Hemingway.
Reminiscence of Hemingway, by Valerie Danby-Smith.

The Rise and Fall of the Space Age, by Edwin Diamond.
Negro Thought in America: 1880- 1915, by August Meier; The Negro Revolution in America, by William Brink and Louis Harris; An Education in Georgia, by Calvin Trillin; Integration vs. Segregation, edited by Hubert H. Humphrey.
Mr. Kennedy and the Negroes, by Harry Golden.
Nlore Roman Tales, by Alberto Moravia.
The Long Voyage, by Jorge Semprun. Auto-da-fe, by Elias Canetti.
Can I Get There by Candlelight, by Julius Horwitz. Accident, by Elizabeth Janeway.
A Long Madness, by Antonio Barolini.
Liberalism and the Retreat from Politics, by William j. Newman; The Liberal Dilemma, by Harvey C.
Bunke.
The Middle East and the West, by Bernard Lewis; The United States and the Middle East, edited by Georgiana G. Stevens; People and Policy in the Middle East, by Max Weston Thornburg.
Check List of the Week's New Books.
Religion and Freedom in the Modern World, by Herbert J. Muller; Religion Ponders Science, edited by Edwin P. Booth.

SR: DEPARTMENTS:
State of Affairs, by Henry Brandon.
Phoenix Nest, by Martin Levin.
Trade Winds, by Jerome Beatty, Jr.
Chess Corner, by Al Horowitz.
Letters to the Editor.
SR Goes to the Movies: Hollis Alpert on new realism and old.
Broadway Postscript: Henry Hewes reviews Blues for Mister Charlie.
TV and Radio, by Robert Lewis Shayon.
Booked for Travel: Horace Sutton in Raiatéa.
Music to My Ears: Irving Kolodin on the New York State Theater's opening.
Literary I. Q.
Literary Crypt.
As It Happens, by Fred Sparks.
Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 1570.


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