Vol. 18 No. 2 1951 - page 257

Koestler's brilliant and terrifying
new
novel–
his greatest since DARKNESS AT NOON!
THE AGE OF LONGING
ARTHUR KOESTLER poses the most crucial problem
of our times in a novel that
will
be hailed as one of this
year's-and it may be this decade's-timeliest and most
powerful books. The Place-Paris. The Time-the imme–
diate future, with the forces of totalitarianism threaten–
ing to overwhelm all of Western civilization. The Drama
-between civilized man and the ruthless disciples of
blind power, and between an American girl and one of
those disciples. Note: Readers have had a foretaste of
this exciting book in a chapter recently published in
Partisan Review.
$3.50
The Bolshevik
REVOLUTION
By EDWARD HALLETT CARR,
author of The Soviet Impact on the
Western World. The first volume of
a monumental work destined to be
hailed as the definitive history of
the USSR.
$5.00
RICHARD
HILLARY
By LOVAT DICKSON. The moving
story of a young RAF flyer, sensi–
tive author of The Last Enemy,
who went down in flames, recov–
ered to fly again, was killed at the
age of 23.
$1.75
@
SHAW
By C. E. M. JOAD
A study of Shaw's tremendous im–
pact on the smug world of Victor–
ian respectability, of his philoso–
phy and its shortcomings-written
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THE SKY
CLEARS
$2.50
Edited, A. GROVE DAY. Poems
of the American Indian, translated
by such famous translators as
Franz Boas, revealing the extraor–
dinary range and content of In–
dian poetry.
$3.00
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
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