Woodrow Wilson on Freud's Couch

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WOODROW WILSON ON

FREUDS COUCH

by Barbara Tuck man

The accomplished author of The Guns of August and The Proud Tower discusses the last of Sigmund Freud’s work to be published, a “psychological study” of President Wilson written in conjunction with William Bullitt in 1932 but withheld from publication until now. The book tells much about Freud as well as Wilson, and, says Mrs. Tuchman, raises the question: What can the Freudian method do for history?

When Is an Architect Not an Architect?

by Hunter Lewis

The sad but true story of J. George Stewart and the works he has wrought on Capitol Hill.

LLOYD GEORGE by C. P. Snow

Britain’s leading politician-scientist-novelist presents an affectionate remembrance of the great radical.

And Among Other Features

Iris Origo on Ignazio Silone and his works V. S. Pritchett on Dublin Gaol and The Rising An Atlantic “First” story by Jib Fowles Dan Wakefield on John Dos Passos