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TITLE: The Saturday Review of Literature
[Each Saturday Review of Literature issue covers books, arts, literature, movies, ideas, music, science, poetry and much more. Many regular features and writers, and most reviews are also essays on the subject at hand. ALL the latest books had to have an ad in The Saturday Review! ]
ISSUE DATE: JUNE 17, 1972; Volume LV, Number 25, THE ARTS.
CONDITION: RARE edition, standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: THE ARTS. ROBERTA FLACK: Quiet Fire In A Silky Soul. Cover: Richard Howard.

SR:UP FRONT:
What Went Wrong With Tom Fox's Shiny New Ford Torino By Margaret Bresnahan. What went wrong is that Tom learned his rear wheels might fall off. And then he really got to know his local Ford dealer.
About Those Land Hustlers You've Been Hearing From By Paul Hoffman. Before you buy that parcel of Sun Belt real estate, read all about the adventures of our intrepid author.
The Best the South Has to Offer By Robert Sherrill. Their names are Reubin Askew (which rhymes with Agnew) and Terry Sanford (which doesn't quite rhyme with John Connally, but Sanford might be paired against him anyway). These two, at any rate, are the Democratic vice presidential possibilities to keep an eye on.
EDITORIAL: Night Thoughts on the "Pieta" By Richard Atcheson. When he created the "Pieta," Michelangelo was speaking to mankind through the medium of marble; when he tried to smash it, Laszlo Toth was speaking in quite another language. But what was he trying to say?.

THE ARTS:
LEARNING THE WAYS OF WOOD By Jack Fincher. For today's young carpenters, working with wood is an art and a religion--and often a tough way to make a dollar.
THEATER IN '72 By Henry Hewes. This year the subsidized, low-budget plays kept Broadway from going bankrupt artistically.
AMERICAN SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVALS By Hedy B. Jellinek. Looking for cool sounds to while away hot summer nights? Find them by consulting this comprehensive guide.
RECORDINGS IN REVIEW By Irving Kolodin. Mahler's Eighth, the piano trios of Chopin and Smetana, traditional Spanish songs--read about these new releases as well as the Met's parting tribute to Rudolf Ring.
THE GREAT CUBAN FIASCO By Marjorie Rosen. The U.S. government apparently thought the new Cuban films were too dangerous for Americans to see. But what were the movies really like?.
A NEW VIEW OF VASILY KANDINSKY By David Bourdon. Kandinsky was always esteemed for his early, pioneering abstractions. Now, however, his later, zanier paintings look fresher than ever.
UNRAVELING ROBERTA By Eleanor Moore. Roberta Flack is the nation's new singing sensation, even though her songs are hard to classify and her personality is difficult to decipher.
THEATER: Who's First? By Henry Hewes.
MUSIC: Jazz Report By Stanley Dance.
FILMS: Rosemary's Babies By Arthur Knight.
TRAVEL: The National Birthday Mess By Greg Walter.
PHOENIX NEST: For a Limited Time Edited by Martin Levin.

SR: REVIEWS:
BOOKS:
The Late John Marquand: A Biography By Stephen Birmingham, Reviewed by John W. Aldridge.
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE, By Zena Sutherland.
Liberation for Little Girls, By Katharine Rogers.
The Malcontents By C. P. Snow, Reviewed by Brom Weber.
The Clock Winder By Anne Tyler, Reviewed by Elizabeth Easton.

GAMES: Your Literary I.Q; Wit Twister; Literary Crypt; Kingsley Double-Crostic No. 1993.


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