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You would think that there is not a lot left to say about John Maynard Keynes. After all, he has been the subject of any number of door-stopping biographies, including Robert Skidelsky's marvelous three-volume treatment, plus his shorter, more recent summation of why Keynes matters in 2008. There are books about his marriage, about his friends in the Bloomsbury group, about his probability theories. He has been explicated, interpreted, recast, rethought, attacked, buried, exhumed and shaken to life again. His own prodigious output (he was, after all, a prolific journalist and best-selling author) has been republished, reintroduced, rethought. He has been approached directly and indirectly. We have collections of Friedrich Hayek's correspondence about Keynes and, just recently, a new book by Nicholas Wapshott on the shifting relationship between Keynes and Hayek. There is, of course, a vast corpus of economic monographs on Keynes' work -- pro and con -- that has been accumulating for half a century.
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