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handwritten in top margin No, you can't lose me. The P.O. finds me. When will you finish the autobiography? Your start on those lines in the MLa Quarterly is most absorbing. Love to you & Gladys & all. Mark

printed bibliography

MARK HARRIS Bibliography No. 10 May Day, 1968

The entries below include seven novels, one play, and two books of autobiographical non-fiction. Academic Record: Ph.D., American Studies, University of Minnesota, 1956; B.A., M.A., English, University of Denver. Department of English, San Francisco State College, 1954-1968.

I was born November 19, 1922, in Mount Vernon, New York. My wife is the former Josephine Horen; our children are Hester Jill, Anthony Wynn, and Henry Adam. I am Professor of English, Purdue University. (Summer address: Box 14037, Zip 94114.)

Agent: Mrs. Ad Schulberg, 300 East 57th Street, New York City.

1968 ESSAYS: "Outlawing the Rack Jobber," read at Los Angeles, January 9 (on San Francisco State College), and "Being Friendly to Myself," read at Purdue, March 7 (autobiographical). Copies are available free.

1967 I assisted as writer and editor in the preparation of italics: Public Television: A Program for Action, the Carnegie Commission on Educational Television, Bantam Books and Harper & Row. ARTICLES: "The Flowering of the Hippies" and "Max Rafferty of California," The Atlantic Monthly, September, December. REVIEWS: of italics: Friendship and Fratricide, Saturday Review, February 11; and of two books by Yaël Dayan, Chicago Sun-Times Book Week, November 5.

1966 AUTOBIOGRAPHY: italics: Twentyone Twice: A Journal, Little, Brown and Company. REPORT: A survey of educational television in California, Washington, and Arizona, for the Carnegie Commission on Educational Television. ESSAY: italics: Alan Swallow, 1915-1966, The New York Times Book Review, December 18. (Award grant by the National Endowment for the Arts.)