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Szpak and Nelson note that some professors have sought to draw special attention to their manuscripts and on occasion authors have pressured Review members to publish their articles...
...Publishing first class law review articles is the sort of staple of legal scholarship that professors are expected to produce in order to get tenure, and in order to keep up their end of the bargain," says Michael Boudin '61, a lecturer at the Law School. "It is regarded as highly attractive in the legal community to publish a first class law article," he adds...
Last fall, Professor of Law Richard B. Stewart proposed that the Law School faculty publish a separate journal of its own, complaining that the Review's demand for long, meticulously researched articles limits professors' opportunities to air their ideas...
...Island similar to the one made by Fellow Exile Alexander Solzhenitsyn in his 1978 Harvard speech: materialism is softening up the West for the triumph of Communism. By contrast, there are no hidden homilies in Aksyonov's multilevel, 230,000-word novel, The Burn, which Random House will publish later this year. A denser, darker work than The Island, The Burn reflects the author's searing experience as the child of victims of Stalin's great purges. It also powerfully evokes another subject proscribed in Soviet fiction since Stalin's day: sex. It is a fact...
Kangaroo, which Farrar, Straus & Giroux will publish in June, is a masterly example of the Russian mode of skaz, or first-person narrative in the vernacular rather than in literary language. Aleshkovsky, who tells his manic tale in the voice of the crook, displays a phenomenal command of police, prison and underworld slang, as well as Russian obscenity. The writer is currently at work on a novel about a Soviet exile in the U.S. Its hero is a small-time Soviet Casanova who ceaselessly roams the country in a rented car in search of love and lust. He finds both...