1.VB-W
SO-OKS
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FElO.M' .FARRAR•
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S2'.RAV'S
&
OV'DA~
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Mary McCarthy
ON THE CONTRARY
Miss McCarthy's biting comment on
such contemporary phenomena as Vas–
Bar girls; the American woman's place
in home and in bed; fashion maga–
zines; today's novelists.
$4.50
C.
Y.
Lee
CRIPPLE MAH AND THE
NEW ORDER
The obedient hero of this satiric novel,
set in Peiping, tries to carry out the
Party I\logan, "Get rid of your emo–
tional burdensl"
$3.95
John Rae
THE CUSTARD BOYS
A brilliant first novel, showing the
corrosive effect of war on a group of
English schoolboys.
"It
would be dif–
ficult
to
praise too highly." -
Man–
chester Guardian
$3.95
Ronald
Harwood
GEORGE WASHINGTON
SEPTEMBER, SIRI
A savage first novel about a Zulu
houseboy in Cape Town. "Not since
Cry, the Beloved Country
has the
South African tragedy been expressed
with such economy, significance, imd
honesty." -
Sunday Times, London
$3.95
Nikolai Leskov
SELECTED TALES
Including "Lady Maebeth of the
Mtsensk District" and "The Enchanted
Wanderer," by a great Russian writer,
newly translated by DAVID MAGAR–
SHACK. Introduction by V. S. PRIT–
CHETT.
$5.00
Coming soon:
Bernard
Malamud
A NEW LIFE
"Probably the best comic novel in
contemporary American literature•
.And it represents a real advance for
Malamud - he has never written with
such authority and such brilliance."
- NORMAN PODHORETZ
$4.95
John A.
Williams
NIGHT SONG
"Eloquent, bitter, often beautiful •••
One of the very few novels about jazz,
and its limbo world, that has the im–
pact of reality." - JOHN CLELLON
HOLMES
$3.50
Robert Lowell
IMITATIONS
The author of
Life Studies
here offers
"imitations" of eighteen poets from
Homer, Villon, Hugo, and Baudelaire
to Montale and Pasternak.
$4.50
Now at your bookstore
FARRAR, STRAUS
&
CUDAHY
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