Vol. LX, No. 3: AUTUMN 2007

Bruce Bawer
The Way of All Flesh

Andrew Hudgins
End-Days in the Garden

Herbert Gold
The Norwegian Captain

Laurence Lieberman
Granddad and the Humpbacks

Liam Rector
Class Curse

Mary-Sherman Willis
The Laughter of Women

Alfred Corn
Art II

Notes on Contributors

 

ALSO IN THE AUTUMN ISSUE

Clara Claiborne Park
Grease, Balance, and Point of View in the
Work of Anthony Trollope

D. Nurkse
Skating Upriver; A Wedding in Maine;
Ring Effect

Michael McFee
Bald Spot

Lola Haskins
The Interpreters;
In Tide Pools

CHRONICLES

Art
Karen Wilkin
At the Galleries:
Toronto & New York

Theatre
Richard Hornby
International Theatre

Dance
Siobhan Phillips
Cunningham's Collaboration

REVIEWS

David Mason
The Long and the
Short of Robinson

Peter Makuck
The Art of What Remains

Thomas Filbin
How Dosty Did It

Dean Flower
Another Wharton

Michael Barber
If Lucky Jim Could
See Him Now

Susan Balée
Jim Crace's
Violent Verities

COMMENT

Jayanta Mahapatra
Letter from India

 

 

About The Hudson Review

 

Editor: Paula Deitz • Founding Editor: Frederick Morgan


Founded in 1947, The Hudson Review is a quarterly magazine of literature and the arts published in New York City. Frederick Morgan, one of its founding editors, edited the magazine for its first fifty years. Paula Deitz has been the editor since 1998.

Since its beginning, the magazine has dealt with the area where literature bears on the intellectual life of the time and on diverse aspects of American culture. It has no university affiliation and is not committed to any narrow academic aim or to any particular political perspective. The magazine serves as a major forum for the work of new writers and for the exploration of new developments in literature and the arts. By consistently maintaining its critical standards and a commitment to excellent writing, The Hudson Review has made a significant impact on the international literary climate. It has a distinguished record of publishing little-known or undiscovered writers, many of whom have become major literary figures. Each issue contains a wide range of material including: poetry, fiction, essays on literary and cultural topics, book reviews, reports from abroad, and chronicles covering film, theatre, dance, music and art. The Hudson Review is distributed in twenty-five countries.

 

Click here for information about The Hudson Review’s 55th Anniversary Issue.

Click here to read an interview with Frederick Morgan.

Click here to read an article from the Baltimore Sun, celebrating The Hudson Review’s 50th year.



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