Outstanding complete 32 year-old issue of the New York Review of Books for 19 November 1992 is in very good condition (60 pages--oversize). 

Some highlights I find include:

Clifford Geertz's opening essay called "[Jean] Genet's Last Stand" following the publication of his "Prisoner of Love." Much here on his obsession with Palestinian rights and future freedom from Israeli control and on other liberation causes that he supported over the years.

The always engaging Michael Wood's essay, "Life Studies" on the life and work of Toni Morrison. This in review of her "Jazz," and of her "Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination."

A long essay called "Painting in the Dark" on the life and works of Belgian painter Rene Magritte by Richard Dorment (with two reproductions from his work). 

Robert Craft on "Vita and Harold: The Letters of Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson."

A long essay, noted on the cover of the issue as "The Limits of George Will" in review of Will's "Restoration: Congress, Term Limits and the Recovery of Deliberate Democracy." Gary Wills here demolishes every point that George Will tries to make in steamroller fashion. Donald Trump ordered Fox News to fire Will in January 2016.         

Gabriele Annan's "Graveyard Utopia." This on Gunter Grass' new book, "The Cult of the Toad," with a nice toady caricature of Grass by David Levine.

E.A.J. Honigmann's essay in review of two new Shakespeare-related works, Russell Fraser's "Shakespeare: The Later Years," and Leeds Barroll's "Politics, Plague, and Shakespeare's Theatre:The Stuart years."

Stephen Jay Gould's always interesting long essay called "The Confusion over Evolution." This in review of three new works related to Charles Darwin and his theories by Helena Cronin, Niles Eldredge and Peter Douglas Ward.

Other essays, letters, etc.