This is the earliest issue of the Paris Review that I’ve read. The early issues are hard to come by (and expensive if you find them), but I got this one pretty reasonably.
And… I’m afraid I have to report that it’s not very good.
I guess they didn’t have enough CIA funding at this point to attract more well-known writers, so we mostly get early works by people who would later become more well-known. I did quite like this story by Ben Morreale…
There’s been a lot of reaction against authors writing from other people’s positions — i.e., “appropriation” and all that stuff. I’m all for writers writing whatever they want, but the worst pieces in this issue illustrate perfectly why these stories fall flat in embarassing ways — for instance, this oh-so-ironic story by Evan S. Connell about a suburban house wife, which feels like the least insightful character study ever committed to paper.
Or Donald Winks writing about the hard boiled life on a steamer, which reads like a Boy’s Adventure tale, complete with O. Henry ending and everything.
The Zygmund Haupt story is just bad all over.
But the Zev portfolio from Paris is nice.
And there’s Adrienne Rich, and I did very much like the piece by May Swenson.
The Paris Review #10 (1955)



























