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...London literary agency that represented Evelyn Waugh and now handles publication rights for the novelist's estate. Says Managing Director Michael Sissons: "We had called up the Waugh files, going back to shortly after his death [1966] to look for evidence, while trying to renegotiate some of the paperback royalty rates." Suddenly the familiar rustle of contracts became the startling flutter of serendipity. "Out of the 1970 file," says Sissons, "dropped a typescript of Chapter I of Charles Ryder's Schooldays...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: A Stillborn Son of Brideshead | 3/15/1982 | See Source »

...Herman's father Edmund (Jack Lemmon), who joins Horman's wife (Sissy Spacek) in a frustrating quest to find out what happened to his son (John Shea). Basing his narrative largely on Thomas Hauser's 1978 book, The Execution of Charles Horman (reissued in a new paperback as Missing), Costa-Gavras shows the pair running up against a phalanx of American diplomats who profess to be helping but who know all along that the Chilean military authorities have already murdered young Horman. Indeed, the movie goes so far as to suggest that an American official might have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Missing: Fact or Fabrication? | 3/8/1982 | See Source »

...Laingen letter is among hundreds of classified embassy cables, Government documents and personal papers seized by the militants and published in a set of 13 paperback books in Iran last spring. Though the volumes have been sold in Tehran for months, for about $8 a set, the contents became widely known only as the books began to be distributed in Europe in recent weeks. Many documents were found intact by the embassy attackers but others had been shredded by frantic U.S. personnel. These have been painstakingly pasted back together by the militants. The papers were of different colors-blue, pink...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Blurred View from the Embassy | 2/15/1982 | See Source »

These findings are only a few of the surprising conclusions in Places Rated Almanac (Rand McNally; $11.95 paperback), by Richard Boyer and David Savageau. The authors, who live in small Massachusetts communities not mentioned in their book, spent four years on research. The result: a 386-page study that rates 277 U.S. metropolitan areas on the basis of such factors as climate, housing, crime, transportation, education, recreation, the arts, taxes and jobs. Boyer, a former editor, and Savageau, an executive headhunter, rank each area only on statistics. Such nonmeasurable considerations as a city's charm or the quality...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: What Makes Home Sweet | 1/11/1982 | See Source »

Poor Russell's Almanac will never achieve the fame of its forebear, Ben Franklin's legendary compendium of minutiae. Indeed, the $12 edition Baker has targeted at holiday shoppers might be worth skipping until the inevitable paperback appears. But read the newest Almanac and cherish Baker's insights. It is a rare man who can so aptly criticize America's foibles and still maintain a sense of humor. Baker does it better than anyone...

Author: By Paul A. Engelmayer, | Title: Back in the Saddle | 1/4/1982 | See Source »

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