WHAT TO DO WITH CAPOTE, FROST, AND KISSINGER? THE ATLANTIC MOVE LEAVES A DILEMMA

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From: The Boston Globe
Date: 20051231
Author:Michael Levenson, Globe Correspondent

Truman Capote laments that the editors found it necessary to cut his story. The anthropologist Margaret Mead wonders what happened to the manuscript she sent from Bali. Robert Frost asks for someone to please insert a space between the words I and would in one of his poems.

The Atlantic Monthly venerable chronicle of the nation's politics, arts, and letters for 148 years is packing up and moving out of Boston to its parent company's offices in Washington, D.C., and, as in any big move, it's the odds and ends accumulated over the years that are proving the most vexing.

Thousands of ...

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