One of the earliest and most informed young opponents of the Vietnam War (The Village of Ben Sue was published in 1967 when he was twenty-three), Jonathan Schell wrote strongly worded articles week after week, year after year, in the “Notes and Comments" section of The New Yorker. His moral but never preachy tone as well as his grasp of the philosophical and historical aspects of political-military conflicts immediately attracted Niccold Tucci, who recognized a kindred spirit.

An emigre from Fascist Italy in the 1930s, Tucci wrote for many American periodicals: political commentary for such legendary magazines as Dwight MacDonald's politics, as well as stories and articles for The New Yorker and, in its early days, The Paris Review. Indeed, his wittily trenchant essay “On Drunkenness" caught the attention of W.H. Auden, who quoted from it in “The Dyer's Hand,” The Paris Review continued to publish him over the years. A story, “The French Revolution, " appeared in issue Mill, and a rem…