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Publisher of The Nation, VICTOR NAVASKY

NPR Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
In 1967, a group of writers conceived a literary hoax.
1967 year · group of writers
VICTOR NAVASKY, publisher
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Citation-ready fact
In 1972, Leonard Lewin admitted the hoax.
1972 year · hoax admission
LEONARD LEWIN, author
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Publisher of The Nation, VICTOR NAVASKY. He was one of a group of writers who in 1967 conceived of a literary hoax. The book "Report From Iron Mountain," was penned by Leonard Lewin and was a satire, supposedly written by a commission of eminent scholars about the problems that would arise in the United States if "permanent peace" should arrive. The book has been compared to Swift's "A Modest Proposal" and "Dr. Strangelove" for its social and political commentary. It wasn't until 1972 that Lewin admitted the hoax. Even so, extreme-right fringe groups have now taken the book to heart "as proof of a secret government plot to suppress personal liberties." The book has been reissued, (by The Free Press) with an introduction by VICTOR NAVASKY. REV: Rock historian ED WARD continues his series on the instruments of rock and roll. Today's installment: the keyboards.

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