Vol XLII, Number 1, January 12, 1995. 56 pp.
- John Updike on 'Ominous Hush', an exhibition in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art showing the thunderstorm paintings of Martin Johnson Heade
-
The Secret Life of Master Spy Kim Philby
-
Naturalist by Edward O. Wilson
- Timothy Garton Ash on intellectuals and politicians in Prague
And many more reviews and essays. Check the table of contents. This is a great chance to complete your print collection. NYRB issues prior to January 2016 are not available on the NYRB website.
The New York Review of Books is a semi-monthly magazine. With a worldwide circulation of over 135,000, the magazine has established itself as 'the premier literary-intellectual magazine in the English language.' (Esquire) It is a magazine in which 'the most interesting and qualified minds of our time discuss current books and issues in depth'
From the 1960s into the 21st Century, The New York Review of Books has posed the questions in the debate on American life, culture, and politics. It is the journal where Mary McCarthy reported on the Vietnam War from Saigon and Hanoi; Edmund Wilson challenged Vladimir Nabokov’s translations; Hannah Arendt published her reflections on violence; Ralph Nader published his “manifesto” for consumer justice; I.F. Stone investigated the lies of Watergate; Susan Sontag challenged the claims of modern photography.
The Chicago Tribune called the NYRB 'one of the few venues in American life that takes ideas seriously. And it pays readers the ultimate compliment of assuming that we do too.'