TO END ALL WARSA Story of Loyalty and RebelliAdam Hochschild ISBN: 9780618758289Hardcover, $28.00 Rights: US, C, O World War I stands as one of hist carnage, defying rational explana narrative with haunting echoes fo brings it to life as never before. H drama of the war’s critics, alongsi jail for their opposition to the war journalist, a future winner of the editor who, behind bars, publishe on toilet paper. These critics were their enemy hawks: one of Britain campaigners h ad a brother who Western Front. Two well-known si they ended up publishing newspa Today, hundreds of military ceme bodies of millions of men who die WHAT THERE IS TO SThe correspondence of Eudora Edited by Suzanne Marrs ISBN: 9780547376493 Hardcover, $35.00 Rights: World For over fifty years, Eudora Welty admired writers, penned letters t about work and family, literary op despair and hilarity. Living half a nourished and maintained by thei What There Is to Say We Have Sa Maxwell’s editorial relationships— editor and in their collegial back-a chronicle of the literary world of t William Shawn, Katherine Anne P William Faulkner, John Updike, Vi more. It is a treasure trove of rea Here, Suzanne Marrs—Welty’s bio lives. Through careful collection o created a record of a remarkable n, 1914 - 1978ry’s most senseless spasms ofion. In a riveting, suspenseful r our own time, Adam Hochschild e focuses on the long-ignored moral de its generals and heroes. Thrown in were Britain’s leading investigative obel Prize for Literature, and an a newspaper for his fellow inmates sometimes intimately connected to ’s most prominent women pacifist as commander in chief on the sters split so bitterly over the war that pers that attacked each other. teries spread across the fields of northern in the “war to end all wars.” Can we ever Y WE HAVE SAID Welty and William Maxwelland William Maxwell, two of our most each other. They shared their worries inions and scuttlebutt, moments ofontinent apart, their friendship was r correspondence. idbears witness to Welty and both in his capacity as New Yorkerndforth on their work. It’s also a e time; read talk of James Thurber, rter, J. D. Salinger, Isak Dinesen, irginia Woolf, Walker Percy, Ford Madox Fo ding recommendations. grapher and friend— offers an unpreceden f more than 300 letters as well as her own friendship and a lyrical homage to the forg rance and Belgium contain the avoid repeating history? rd, John Cheever, and many ed window into two intertwined insightful introductions, she has tten art of letter writing.