December 1945
In This Issue
Explore the December 1945 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
DDT and the Balance of Nature
Woman and Drinks
Dunbar's Siamese Cat
2 Bedrooms, 6 Baths
Music
What the Latins Think of Hollywood
I Become a Mohammedan
Lament for a Dead Sea-Otter
Television and the Artist
The Peripatetic Reviewer
The Far East
What Makes a General?
The Perennial Philosophy
A Man From Kansas
A Nation of Nations
Last Leaves
The Human Life of Jesus
What Cheer: An Anthology of American and British Humorous and Witty Verse
Sixty Million Jobs
The Practical Cogitator or the Thinker's Anthology
The Black Rose
Germany Is Our Problem
Indian Paul
Latin America
The Atlantic Report on the World Today: Washington
London
Letters to and From the Editor
The Last Three Days of Mussolini
“Il Duce slumped, first falling to his knees, then leaning sideways against the wall.”
Children in Germany
John Steinbeck: Novelist at Work
The American Tariff and World Trade
Salem, 1692: Cantata for Mixed Chorus
The Party
The Return to Love
Iphigenia in America
Tea at the Rectory
Haunted House
Paris
Bor's Uprising
Ship's Auction











