January 1941
In This Issue
Explore the January 1941 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: Part I
In 1937, Rebecca West set out to see for herself why the "Powderkeg of Europe" had so often threatened the fate of the continent.
For the New Year
A Present for Marge
Not So Comic
Citizenship: Its Privileges and Responsibilities
The Battle of London
The Second Empire
Automobiles Go Ahead
Nurse Death and My Father
We Build the Future
What Bills Do You Pay?
Hitler's Alternatives: Is He a Prisoner of Conquest?
Grompa Samyel's Supper
Letter to Elizabeth Mayer: (January 1, 1940)
Wanted: More Milk
Sibelius at Seventy-Five
King William Land
English Lessons in Cuba
Business Under the X-Ray
Shelley
The Atlantic Recommends
Embezzled Heaven
Today and Destiny: Vitae Excerpts From Spengler's 'The Decline of the West'
The Tide of Fortune
China Trader
I Speak for Myself
Give Me Liberty: The Story of an Innocent Bystander
Trail of an Artist Naturalist
Washington and the Revolution: A Reappraisal
Zero Hour
The Face Is Familiar
Journey Into Fear
Europe and the German Question
My Life With George
The Contributors Column