Table of contents
THE SUSSEX LIBRARY SCENE
Jack DoveAWAY FROM THE MURKINESS of industrialization and yet near enough to the Metropolis to get there in sixty minutes or less! Such is the position of the person who is fortunate…
THE TONGUE‐TIED BRITANNICA: The Fount of Knowledge Runs Dry
Harvey EinbinderTHE PUBLICATION in 1964 of my book, The Myth of the Britannica, fulfilled a promise made in the spring of 1960 in the Columbia Forum that I would write a book which would…
THE FAMILY REFERENCE SHELF
Harry C. BauerBUSY HOMEMAKERS seldom take time to itemize the many helpful reference books that are ever at hand; they simply take these invaluable assets for granted. Indeed, there are times…
CHURCHILL—AND A SCOTS POET
Helen B. CruickshankWHILE WATCHING ON TELEVISION RECENTLY the impeccably‐organized funeral procession of Sir Winston Churchill pass through streets well‐known to me during my ten years' residence in…
CHEKHOV'S POWERS AS A SHORT STORY WRITER
Muriel M. GreenCHEKHOV'S SHORT STORIES reveal, above all, his observation and love of mankind. He depicts people as they are—good, bad, or a mixture of qualities and defects—never judging them…
THE USES OF LITERATURE
AN INAUGURAL LECTURE with this title delivered in the University of Leicester in November 1964 by F. W. J. Hemmings, Professor of French Literature, has now been published by…