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THE PARIS REVIEW No. 120 Fall 1991 |
$30 | Order Now |
Everything important always begins with something trivial: Donald Hall on the Art of Poetry.
Czeslaw Milosz describes his favorite streets.
An essay by Geoffrey Wolff. Stories by Harold Brodkey, Larry Brown, Kim Edwards, and Norman Mailer. Poems by Mary Oliver and Charles Simic. |
| TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| INTERVIEW |
| Donald Hall, The Art of Poetry No. 43 | | Wright Morris, The Art of Fiction No. 125 |
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| FICTION |
| Harold Brodkey, from The Runaway Soul | | Larry Brown, A Roadside Resurrection | | Kim Edwards, The Great Chain of Being | | Norman Mailer, from Harlot's Ghost |
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| FEATURE |
| Czeslaw Milosz, Beginning with My Streets | | Geoffrey Wolff, The Sick Man of Europe |
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| POETRY |
| Agha Shahid Ali, A Nostalgist's Map of America | | Nin Andrews, The Artichoke | | John Ash, Two Poems | | Alfred Corn, La Madeline | | Gabrielle Glancy, Two Poems | | Debora Greger, Two Poems | | Donald Hall, The Third Inning | | Mary Stewart Hammond, My Mother-in-law Sailing | | Jane Hirshfield, The Wedding | | Kenneth Koch, On Aesthetics | | James Lasdun, Two Poems | | John Lindgren, Three Views of an Iris | | Sandra McPherson, Precipice, Rush, Sheath | | Cynthia Nadelman, Naming the Birds | | Mary Oliver, Two Poems | | Charles Simic, Two Poems | | John Updike, Two Poems |
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| ART |
| Jack Balas, Today I Drove along the Rio Grande | | Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Cover | | Donald Moffett, Glory |
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