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Clifton Paul "Kip" Fadiman (May 15, 1904 – June 20, 1999) was an American intellectual, author, editor, and radio and television personality. He began his work in radio, and switched to television later in his career.
The set included an index similar to the Great Books' Syntopicon, along with reading plans of increasing difficulty.Hutchins wrote an introduction with a more informal tone than he used in The Great Conversation, his preface to the Great Books, and that chiefly explained the relevance of most of the categories making up the set: "The Imagination of Man" (about fiction and drama), "Man and ...
The Time Reading Program (TRP) was a book sales club run by Time–Life, the publisher of Time magazine, from 1962 through 1966. Time was known for its magazines, and nonfiction book series' published under the Time-Life imprint, while the TRP books were reprints of an eclectic set of literature, both classic and contemporary, as well as nonfiction works and topics in history.
Fadiman is the first cousin once removed of child prodigy William James Sidis. Sidis was the son of Sarah Sidis (née Mandelbaum), who was the sister of Fadiman's paternal grandmother, Grace Fadiman (née Mandelbaum). [33] He was also featured in the first episode of the 2022 Netflix documentary series How to Change Your Mind.
Fantasia Mathematica [1] is an anthology published in 1958 containing stories, humor, poems, etc., all on mathematical topics, compiled by Clifton Fadiman. A companion volume was published as The Mathematical Magpie (1962). The volume contains writing by authors including Robert Heinlein, Aldous Huxley, H. G. Wells, and Martin Gardner.
Annalee Whitmore Fadiman (May 27, 1916 – February 5, 2002) [1] was a scriptwriter for MGM, and World War II foreign correspondent for Life and Time magazines. [2] Under the name Annalee Jacoby she was the co-author with Theodore H. White of Thunder Out of China , a book of reportage on World War Two in China .
Anne Fadiman (born August 7, 1953) is an American essayist and reporter. Her interests include literary journalism , essays, memoir, and autobiography. [ 2 ] She has received the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Current Interest, and the Salon Book Award.
Clifton Fadiman (b. 1904) was Sarah Mandelbaum Sidis's nephew, according to Amy Wallace's book about William James Sidis, so Boris Sidis was Fadiman's uncle, not his grandfather or his great-uncle. Boris and Sarah Sidis had two children, William James Sidis (b. 1898) and Helena (not Grace) Sidis (b. 1908).