October 1946
In This Issue
Explore the October 1946 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Hitler's Capital
From November 1944, to April 1946, the author was Director of the Art Looting Investigation Unit, OSS, where he was directly responsible for recovering the works of art that had been looted by Rosenberg, Goring, and Hitler and hidden in Germany.
Ecce Vidimus
Second Movement
First Personal
Obeah
Such Is Rachel
The Errors of Ralph Ingersole
My Wrestle With English
The Library in Our Town
The Sunshine of Genius
This Month
Young Hunger
One Psychological Moment, Please
Here in the Studio..
Letter From a Horse
The Politician's Prayer
Carillons
You Never Knew My Cat, Walt Whitman
The Peripatetic Reviewer
The Atlantic Report on the World Today: Washington
Masterpieces Weekly
Publishing in the Dark
The Wilson Era
Hardy the Novelist
Theme and Variations
For All Mankind
The Lowells and Their Seven Worlds
Brandeis: A Free Man's Life
The Salem Frigate
Command Decision: A Novel of the Army Air Forces
Rome
Latin America
Paris
How We Will Vote
Mihailovich: A Post-Mortem
The Constant Symbol
The Part of Youth
Almost Touching the Confederacy
What Is "Fireproof"?
Little Victor