E.B. White published his first article in the then newly founded magazine The New Yorker four years after graduating in arts from Cornell University. In 1927 he joined the editors' squad. Over the next six decades he produced a long series of essays and became the most important contributor to The New Yorker when it was the most influential American literary magazine. His "Notes and Comments" column was one of the most read in the publication's history. As several generations grew up reading it, White sculpted it scrupulously. Through his publications he developed the concerns that would accompany part of his work and his life: the fear of war and irrational phenomena, internationalism and humor. Thus, E. B. White Essays is a mandatory reading, a compilation of excellence shaped by the hand of one of its greatest masters and one of the best exponents of contemporary American prose.