Articles
"In Hula Land." Harper's Bazaar 62 (September 1928): 98-99, 136, 138, 142.
"Lifting China Out of the Mud!" China Weekly Review , October 10, 1928, 84-91.
"A First Class Stowaway." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , October 21, 1928, 10-11, 14.
"Kansas City Boy Stowaway." Kansas City Journal-Post , November 11, 1928.
"Japanese Interference at the Yellow River Bridge—and Other Aspects of Tsinanfu." China Weekly Review , January 19, 1929, 315-318.
"Adventures in Chinese Advertising." Advertising & Selling , May 1, 1929, 30, 32., 90, 92.
"Which Way Manchuria." China Weekly Review , July 20, 1929, 333-339.
"Saving 250,000 Lives." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , September 8, 1929, 14-15, 31.
"The 'Middle Kingdom' from the Clouds." China Weekly Review , October 19, 1929, 273-276, 278.
"Chinese Please Use Rear Entrance." China Weekly Review , November 9, 1929, 369-370.
"Son of the Grand Marshal." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , December 15, 1929, 14-15, 25.
"China Creates a New God." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , March 16, 1930, 4-5, 144.
"Daughters of China's Revolution." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , April 6, 1930, 1-3.
"The Americans in Shanghai." American Mercury 20 (August 1930): 427-445.
"Chinese Guests Now Welcome." New York Sun , September 25, 1930.
"Some Results of 35 Years of Japanese Rule in Formosa." China Weekly Review , November 15, 1930, 389-391.
"The Strength of Communism in China, I: The Bolshevist Influence." Current History 33 (January 1931): 521-526.
"En Route from Taihoku to Hong Kong via the Subsidized D.S.K.—a Second-Class Passage with Two Chinese Ladies, a Japanese Girl and Three Japanese Men." New York Sun , April 28, 1931.
"The Railroad Journey to Yunnanfu Is Filled with Scenic Thrills." New York Sun , June 30, 1931.
"Canton, Metropolis of South China, Where the Feverish Rush of Occidental Cities Is Noted—Much of the Old Has Made Way for Modern Progress." New York Sun , April 9, 1931. Reprinted as "Canton—Home of Rebels and Revolutions" (China Weekly Review , August 1, 1931, 344, 346-347).
"The Trial of British Communists at Meerut, India." China Weekly Review , September 19, 1931, 106.
"The Revolt of India's Women." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , October 25, 1931, 14-15, 24-25.
"Calcutta, India, City of Contrasting Beauty and Squalor—The Hindu Rituals on the Banks of the Sacred Ganges River." New York Sun , October 29, 1931.
"In the Wake of China's Flood." China Weekly Review , January 23, 1932, 243-245.
"Says Reds Will Rule China." New York Sun , October 18, 1932.
"She Fights for China's Masses." New York Herald-Tribune Magazine , August 6, 1933, 10-11, 19.
"The Decline of Western Prestige." Saturday Evening Post , August 26, 1933, 12-14, 67-69.
"How Rural China Is Being Re-made." China Weekly Review , December 16 and 30, 1933, 98-101, 202-203.
"Weak China's Strong Man." Current History 39 (January 1934): 402-408.
"Japan Builds a New Colony." Saturday Evening Post , February 24, 1934, 12-13, 80-81, 84-87.
"Lu Shun, Master of Pai-Hua." Asia 35 (January 1935): 40-43.
"Christmas Escapade in Japan." Travel , January 1935, 34-38, 47.
"Japan Imposes Her Culture." Asia 35 (April 1935): 218-224.
"The Ways of the Chinese Censor." Current History 42 (July 1935): 381-386.
"Japan Digs In." Saturday Evening Post , January 4, 1936, 8-9, 56-58.
"The Japanese Juggernaut Rolls On." Saturday Evening Post , May 9, 1936, 8-9, 89-90, 92.
"The Coming Conflict in the Orient." Saturday Evening Post , June 6, 1936, 14-15, 82, 84-85, 87.
"Mr. Hirota's Third Point." Foreign Affairs 14 (July 1936): 596-605.
"Interviews with Mao Tse-tung, Communist Leader." China Weekly Review , November 14 and 21, 1936, 377-379, 420-421.
"An Army of Fighting Chinese Communists Takes Possession of China's Northwest." Life , February 1, 1937, 44-49.
"Autobiography of Mao Tse-tung." Asia 37 (July 1937): 480-488; 37 (August 1937): 570-578; 37 (September 1937): 619-623; 37 (October 1937): 682-686.
Soviet China." New Republic , August 4, 1937, 351-354; August 11, 1937, 9-11; August 18, 1937, 42-44; September 8, 1937, 124-125.
"The Long March." Asia 37 (October 1937): 687-692; 37 (November 1937): 741-747.
"I Went to Red China." Saturday Evening Post , November 6, 1937, 9-10, 98, 100-103.
"The Sun Also Sets." Saturday Evening Post , June 14, 1938, 5-6, 30, 33-34, 37.
"China's Fighting Generalissimo." Foreign Affairs 16 (July 1938): 613-625.
"They Love Us, They Love Us Not." Saturday Evening Post , April 29, 1939, 25, 62, 64, 69.
"China's New Industrial Army." Left News (London), July 1939, 1346-1347.
"Filipinos Change Their Minds." Asia 39 (September 1939): 493-496.
"Japan's 'Peaceful' Invasion." Asia 39 (October 1939): 590-592.
"Filipinos Want a Guarantee." Asia 39 (November 1939): 659-661.
"China's Precarious Unity." New Republic , January 8, 1940, 44-45.
"Chinese Communists and Wars on Two Continents: Interviews with Mao Tse-tung." China Weekly Review , January 13, 20, 1940, 244-246, 277-280.
"The Dragon Licks His Wounds." Saturday Evening Post , April 13, 1940, 9-11, 155, 157-158, 160.
"Will Stalin Sell Out China?" Foreign Affairs 18 (April 1940): 450-463.
"Chiang's Armies." Asia 40 (November 1940): 579-582.
"The Generalissimo." Asia 40 (December 1940): 646-648.
"Break Is Feared as Chiang-Red Split Deepens." New York Herald-Tribune , December 26, 1940.
"Reds Fought Off Chiang's Troops 9 Days in China." New York Herald-Tribune , January 22, 1941.
"Things That Could Happen." Asia 41 (January 1941): 7-16.
"China's Blitzbuilder, Rewi Alley." Saturday Evening Post , February 8, 1941, 12-13, 36, 38, 40.
'"Is It Civil War in China?" Asia 41 (April 1941): 166-170.
"Showdown in the Pacific." Saturday Evening Post , May 31, 1941, 27, 40, 43-44, 47.
"How America Can Take the Offensive: II." Fortune 23 (June 1941): 69, 175-180. Also published as "The Political Battle of Asia" in Edmund Taylor, et al., Smash Hitler's International: The Strategy of a Political Offensive Against the Axis . New York: Keystone Press, 1941, 49-71.
"China and the World War." Asia 41 (July 1941): 341-343.
"They Don't Want to Play Soldier." Saturday Evening Post , October 25, 1941, 14-15, 61, 63-67.
"What Is Morale?" Saturday Evening Post , November 15, 1941, 16-17, 117-120, 122-123.
"How Russia Upset Hitler." Saturday Evening Post , January 30, 1943, 20-21, 87, 89-90.
"What Kind of a Man Is a Russian General?" Saturday Evening Post , April 17, 1943, 20-21, 105-106.
"I Saw It with My Own Eyes." Saturday Evening Post , May 29, 1943, 12-13, 86, 88.
"The Nazi Butchers Wasted Nothing." Saturday Evening Post , October 28, 1944, 18-19, 96.
"Eastern Europe Swings Left." Saturday Evening Post , November 11, 1944, 9-11, 69-71.
"Is Red Marriage Turning Blue?" Saturday Evening Post , January 13, 1945, 28-29, 36.
"The Ukraine Pays the Bill." Saturday Evening Post , January 27, 1945, 18-19, 82-84.
"Must China Go Red?" Saturday Evening Post , May 12, 1945, 9-10, 67-68, 70.
"The Stalin Truman Faces." Saturday Evening Post , June 30, 1945, 20-21, 63-64.
"Meet Mr. and Mrs. Russia at Home." Saturday Evening Post , December 22, 1945, 14-15, 65.
"The Message of Gandhi." Saturday Evening Post , March 27, 1948, 24-25, 143-144.
"Will Tito's Heretics Halt Russia?" Saturday Evening Post , December 18, 1948, 23, 108-110.
"Will China Become a Russian Satellite?" Saturday Evening Post , April 9, 1949, 30-31, 147-150.
"The Venomous Doctor Vyshinsky." Saturday Evening Post , October 21, 1950, 19-21, 143-144, 146.
"The New Phase—Undeclared War." Nation , March 10, 1951, 220-223.
"Red China's Gentleman Hatchet Man." Saturday Evening Post , March 27, 1954, 24-25, 116, 118-119.
"Point IV for America." Nation , May 12, 1956, 394-397.
"A Report from Red China." Look , January 31, 1961, 85-88, 91-94, 97-98, 103-104.
"An African Interview with Chou En-lai." Arts and Sciences (London) 2 (April-May 1964): 2-7.
"Interview with Mao." New Republic , February 17, 1965, 17-23.
"China and Vietnam." New Republic , July 30, 1966, 12-14.
"Mao and the New Mandate." New Republic , May 10, 1969, 17-21.
"Aftermath of the Cultural Revolution." New Republic , April 10, 1971, 18-21.
"A Conversation with Mao Tse-tung." Life , April 30, 1971, 46-48.
"What China Wants from Nixon's Visit." Life , July 30, 1971, 22-26.