A TOUCH OF THE POET
EUGENE O'NEILL
The first pUblication of O'Neill's
last full-length play, staged in
Sweden last March and due on
Broadway in 1958. The theme is the
conflict between illusion and reality;
the scene is early 19th-century
Massachusetts.
$3.75
Announcing the October
publication of:
THE COURT AND
THE' CASTLE
REBECCA WEST
CONTRIBUTORS
FLANNERY O'CONNOR has pub–
lished one novel, Wise Blood , and
a volume of short fiction, A Good
Man Is Hard to Find. She lives in
Milledgeville, Georgia.
JUAN RAMON JIMENEZ is the
winner of the Nobel Prize for litera–
ture for 1956. His poem in this
issue will be included in a volume
of Selected Writings, to be pub–
lished this fall by Farrar, Straus
&
Cudahy.
SIDNEY HOOK'S essay is a short–
ened version of a lecture delivered
in August, 1957, at the College de
l'Europe Libre, Strasbourg-Robert–
sau, France.
ALFRED KAZIN, outhor of On Na–
tive Grounds, A Walker in the
City,
and The Folded Leaf, is Pro–
fessor of American Studies at Am–
herst.
RICHARD WOLLHEIM teaches
philosophy at the University of Lon–
don, and is a frequent contributor
$3.75
to Encounter and other English
magazines. This is his first appear–
ance in PRo
ALPHABETS AND
BI,RTHDAYS
GERTRUDE STEIN
$5.00
LYTTON STRACHEY:
HIS MIND AND ART
CHARLES RICHARD SANDERS
$6.00
at 1Iour bookseller
YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
New Haven, Connecticut
LENORE G. MARSHALL has pub–
lis hed two volumes of verse, the
most recent entitled Other Knowl–
edge, and a novel by her will ap–
pear shortly.
ROBERT ROSENBLUM teaches in
the Department of Art and Archae–
ology at Princeton.
HOWARD NEMEROV, who is on
the faculty of Bennington College,
is the author of three novels, in–
cluding the recent The Homecom–
ing Game, and two books of poems.
R. W. FLINT is spending this winter
abroad. He was a PR Fellow in
Criticism for 1956.