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For a complete table of contents listing, or to purchase an issue, click the issue number. |
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| No. 1: Spring 1953 |
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E. M. Forster on the Art of Fiction.
William Styrons Letter to an Editor.
Stories by Peter Matthiessen, Terry Southern, and Eugene Walter. Poems by Robert Bly, Donald Hall, George Steiner. |
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| No. 2: Summer 1953 |
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Every novel worthy of the name is like another planet, whether large or small, which has its own laws just as it has its own flora and fauna: François Mauriac on the Art of Fiction.
Espinouze illustrates six Faulkner stories.
Poems by Richard Eberhart and Richard Wilbur. |
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| No. 3: Autumn 1953 |
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| For a writer to spend much of his time in the company of authors is, you know, a form of masturbation: An interview with Graham Greene.
The prophet v. the craftsman: Donald Hall on poetic method.
Stories by Evan S. Connell, Pati Hill, Sue Kaufman, and Donald Windham. Poems by Christopher Logue and George Steiner. |
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| No. 4: Winter 1953 |
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| Irwin Shaw on Dick Tracy, the doom-conscious generation, and the Art of Fiction.
A fable by Eugene Walter. Stories by Alfred Chester, James Leo Herlihy, and Terry Southern. Poems by Geoffrey Hill, Vilma Howard, Howard Moss, and John Simon. |
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