August 1942
In This Issue
Explore the August 1942 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Aren't Your Children a Problem?
On raising children in the Maine woods
Angel Mo' and Her Son: Roland Hayes
What America Should Be Reading
First Person Singular
Prelude to Victory
The Boy From Maine
Time and the Town
Ruins and Visions
Conditions of Peace
How to Read a Page
Will Germany Crack?
Glimpses of World History
The Disarmament Illusion
Bells and Grass
What's in a Novel
The History of Quakerism
Natalie Maisie and Pavilastukay
The Company She Keeps
Today Belongs to Hitler
As Goes Detroit--
Submarine From Corregidor: Manila Goes Under
I Know Almost Everything
The American Merchant Marine Today
The Minister's Books
The Children
Genesis Again
Editors Live and Learn
The Shape of the News
Denmark's Resistance
A Tool, Not a Creed: An Answer to Stephen Leacock
Wasting of Manpower
The Year of Decision 1846
The Dream Camera
A Lawyer Who Believes in People: The Human Story of a Successful New York Lawyer
Half a Poet and Wholly Woman: The Simplicity and Warm Strength of Dorothy Wordsworth
(1) European Front
Acme
(3) Latin America
The Atlantic Report on the World Today: Washington
What About Inflation?











