Afbeelding van de auteur.

A. J. Liebling (1904–1963)

Auteur van Between Meals: An Appetite for Paris

30+ Werken 2,176 Leden 43 Besprekingen Favoriet van 9 leden

Over de Auteur

A. J. Liebling was an urbane and prolific journalist whose style, incorporating first-person narrative, street talk, and exuberant metaphor, became a model for the New Journalism of the 1960's and later. Although he came from a genteel New York family, he was fascinated by the irreverent underworld toon meer all his life and made it his special subject. After being expelled from Dartmouth College for refusing to attend chapel, Liebling graduated from Columbia University's Pulitzer School of Journalism in 1925 and then worked for various newspapers, including The New York Times, which fired him, and the New York World, before he found his metier at The New Yorker magazine in 1935. It was there that he developed his signature style and did his best work, writing about a wide range of subjects, from the city's characters to gastronomy to boxing to the London Blitz and the Normandy invasion. A born raconteur with a fertile imagination, Liebling carved out a territory between objective reporting and fiction, which so many other journalists have mined since. Yet he could also produce straight war reportage fine enough to merit receiving the Legion of Honor from a grateful France in 1952. Starting in 1945, Liebling wrote a widely admired column for The New Yorker called "The Wayward Pressman," in which he criticized American journalism's priorities and performance. This was probably the first such column in U.S. journalism. During the 1950s and 1960s, he also wrote book reviews for Esquire. Besides his massive newspaper and magazine output, Liebling wrote about 20 books. He was married three times, the last time to the writer Jean Stafford. (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder
Fotografie: John Burlinson

Werken van A. J. Liebling

The Sweet Science (1987) 252 exemplaren
The Earl of Louisiana (1961) 148 exemplaren
The Press (1961) 102 exemplaren
Back Where I Came From (1990) 74 exemplaren
The Road Back to Paris (1944) 74 exemplaren
Liebling Abroad (1981) 73 exemplaren
A Neutral Corner: Boxing Essays (1990) 72 exemplaren
Mollie & Other War Pieces (1964) 52 exemplaren
Chicago: The Second City (1952) 35 exemplaren
The Honest Rainmaker (1953) 32 exemplaren
The most of A. J. Liebling (1963) 23 exemplaren
The Fights (1996) — Essays — 16 exemplaren
Liebling at home (1982) 16 exemplaren
The wayward pressman (1947) 14 exemplaren
The Jollity Building (1962) 14 exemplaren
Normandy Revisited (1958) 14 exemplaren
The Republic of Silence (2003) 8 exemplaren
Mollie (2023) 2 exemplaren
A Free Press 1 exemplaar
Fome de Paris 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

Secret Ingredients: The New Yorker Book of Food and Drink (2007) — Medewerker — 535 exemplaren
Reporting World War II Part Two : American Journalism 1944-1946 (1995) — Medewerker — 388 exemplaren
Life Stories: Profiles from the New Yorker (2000) — Medewerker — 298 exemplaren
Americans in Paris: A Literary Anthology (2004) — Medewerker — 297 exemplaren
The Best of Modern Humor (1983) — Medewerker — 291 exemplaren
Writing New York: A Literary Anthology (1998) — Medewerker — 275 exemplaren
The 40s: The Story of a Decade (2014) — Medewerker — 275 exemplaren
The Art of Fact: A Historical Anthology of Literary Journalism (1997) — Medewerker — 214 exemplaren
Russell Baker's Book of American Humor (1993) — Medewerker — 207 exemplaren
The Norton Book of Personal Essays (1997) — Medewerker — 142 exemplaren
55 Short Stories from The New Yorker, 1940 to 1950 (1949) — Medewerker — 60 exemplaren
The Bedside Tales: A Gay Collection (1945) — Medewerker — 45 exemplaren
The War: Stories of Life and Death from World War II (1999) — Medewerker — 31 exemplaren
The Best American Short Stories 1946 (1946) — Medewerker — 8 exemplaren
The Fireside Treasury of Modern Humor (1963) — Medewerker — 5 exemplaren
The Bathroom Reader (1946) — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
The Spectacle of Sport: Selected from Sports Illustrated (1957) — Medewerker — 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Gangbare naam
Liebling, A. J.
Officiële naam
Liebling, Abbott Joseph
Geboortedatum
1904-10-18
Overlijdensdatum
1963-12-28
Graflocatie
Green River Cemetery, East Hampton, New York
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
New York, New York, USA
Woonplaatsen
New York, New York, USA
Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Paris, France
Opleiding
Columbia University
Dartmouth College
Beroepen
journalist
war correspondent
essayist
media critic
Relaties
Stafford, Jean (wife)
Organisaties
The New Yorker
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Legion d'Honneur
Korte biografie
Abbott Joseph (A.J.) Liebling was the legendary journalist who spent many years writing for The New Yorker magazine. He was born into a wealthy family on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. He attended Dartmouth College, where he wrote for the Jack-O-Lantern, its nationally known humor magazine. He left Dartmouth without graduating, later claiming he was thrown out for "missing compulsory chapel attendance." He then enrolled in the School of Journalism at Columbia University. He began his career as a reporter at the Providence Evening Bulletin and worked briefly in the sports department of the New York Times.
In 1926, his father offered him the chance to study in Paris for a year, which he seized. He studied French medieval literature at the Sorbonne and began a life-long love affair with French life, culture, and cuisine. After returning to the USA, he campaigned for a job on The New York World, which he won. In 1934, he married Mary Anne Quinn, who was often hospitalized for mental illness during their marriage.
They were later divorced and he married author Jean Stafford.
Liebling joined The New Yorker in 1935. During World War II, he served as a war correspondent in North Africa, England, and France, and took part in the D-Day invasion of Normandy. He became famous for his reporting on fine food, politics, horse racing, boxing, and journalism itself. Slate Magazine wrote, "If Liebling didn't invent press criticism, he might as well have. Liebling still ranks so high that, in 2000 when the New Republic's Franklin Foer wanted to take the Washington Post's media reporter Howard Kurtz down a couple of point sizes, he wrote that Kurtz was no Liebling. . .Foer's gist was clear: A few writers may occasionally reach Lieblingesque heights in their press criticism, but nobody survives at the long-dead master's altitude for very long."

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Besprekingen

Excellent collection from Library of America of books and pieces, mainly published in the New Yorker, recounting Liebling's impressions and memories of his years as a war correspondent. At a remove now of some 80 years, a lot of the humor still lands. For being nearly 1000 pages of material (not counting notes, maps and such) it was a remarkably easy read. Recommended to have a French-English dictionary around or something for translating as Liebling frequently drops a few casual words of French into the narrative.

Lots of talk of meals and friends met along the way, some of whom survived the war and others who didn't.

- The Road Back to Paris
- Mollie and Other War Pieces
- Uncollected War Journalism
- Normandy Revisited
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Gemarkeerd
byl_strother | 2 andere besprekingen | Feb 27, 2024 |
Other readers concoct projects that might entail reading, say, all of Balzac’s novels in chronological order (insane, you say?). Or those of Dickens. Not me. I have embarked on a quest of unquestionable merit — tracking down as many writings of A. J. Liebling’s as I can find. If you have read any of his best work, you are shivering with envy, I know. While others seem to limit their excavation of legendary journalists to reading Joseph Mitchell’s “Up in the Old Hotel” and leave it at that, little do they suspect that there are far more delights to be had from other cherished New Yorker writers; however, a bit of online legwork might be needed.

I started this whole venture with “Between Meals: An Appetite for Paris”, which I had seen mentioned in an interview with Anthony Bourdain some time ago. Hooked, I then decided I must read all of the out-of-print books from the San Diego Public Library before they got (shudder) tossed into a rubbish bin. I quickly polished off “Chicago: The Second City” and “A Reporter at Large”. Now, I have a copy of “The Wayward Pressman” in my grasp.

And what a copy it is. An original hardback edition from Doubleday & Co., 1948, it of course has no dust cover and is somewhere between burnt orange and dirty salmon in color. Its pages are as yellow as they come, and even a few minutes of holding it transfers a smell of mustiness to one’s fingers not to be believed, necessitating surgeon-like scrubbing after a reading session, or would be the donning of thin gloves for the germaphobes among us. Remarkably, the spine is quite intact (a testament to the decline in book quality nowadays?), although almost every page is dog-eared and brown-spotted with what one hopes is just spilt coffee. The inside cover has one of those glued-in pockets that at one time received a stamped card containing the due date; the back cover has a scannable chip (instituted by SDPL about two years ago). The title page has been punched by some long-discarded contraption that leaves a series of tiny holes in the page, spelling out “San Diego Public Library” when held singly against the light. Some overzealous librarian also punched page 49. Page 271’s lower corner has perhaps been torn away by an angry pet, removing the ability to read Paul’s last name in page 272’s footnote.

Yes, you’re on the edge of your seat now, aren’t you? Liebling’s writing is marvelous, as always, and the first section is basically a memoir of how he got into the newspaper business in the first place, with some earlier reminiscences of his college days at Dartmouth and at the Columbia School of Journalism. Lots of insight into what reportage was like in the 20’s are included, which of course was during Prohibition. As early as page 63, we have skipped the time he spent in Paris, chronicled memorably and indispensably in “Between Meals”, a sabbatical of sorts ostensibly for study at the Sorbonne but instead devoted to eating well on not a lot of francs. (For contrast, pick up “Down and Out in London and Paris” and read about George Orwell’s stint in the kitchen of a Parisian eatery — it’s fantastic). Liebling’s career as a newspaperman sputters during the Depression, and he was there for the unfortunate end of the great New York World, the paper started by Joseph Pulitzer.

Liebling had been lucky enough to land a full-time gig at the New Yorker magazine in 1935, his employer until his death in 1963. The second section contains a number of pieces that he wrote for the New Yorker under the rubric “The Wayward Press”, essentially an irregular Robert Benchley column that had appeared in the New Yorker between 1927 and 1937 which Liebling resurrected. These articles are all dated between 1945 and 1947; the war year stories he issued from Europe for the magazine were collected in several books (now OOP) and are now available again in the Library of America edition I have yet to peruse. That leaves a gap from 1935 to 1939 that may or may not be covered in some of the other OOP books (such as “Back Where I Came From” and “Telephone Booth Indian”). Anyway, in these articles he critiques the press, actually the New York daily newspapers with the occasional dig at Colonel McCormick’s Chicago Tribune. (I’m reminded of Graydon Carter’s defunct magazine “Spy” and its regular column on the New York Times entitled “The Old Gray Lady”.)

Perhaps the most striking piece is “Papers Within Papers”, in which he calls attention to the recent (in 1947) decision by the dailies to take in political advertising bucks — essentially editorial pieces completely unvetted by the editors — that, without obvious libel, engaged in outlandish claims and innuendo with headlines that might convince the reader that they were actual news stories. In these current days of “advertising” on Facebook that amount to lies and propaganda and CNN webpage “stories” feebly and microscopically labeled “Paid Content”, this article seems alarmingly prescient. The defensive statements made by the publisher of the New York Times, Alfred Sulzberger, sound eerily like those of Mark Zuckerberg.

What Liebling was doing at the New Yorker could not have occurred without his firm grounding in the inner workings of newspapers (both in small — Providence, R.I. — and large markets). There’s a lot of information here about the business and how it was conducted back then that you won’t find anywhere outside a well-researched bio of one of these owners. Over the course of his career, Liebling saw the number of dailies in New York dwindle from over fifteen to less than a half dozen during his career; the underachieving (in quality) Daily News led the field with a circulation of over 2,250,000 in 1947. His was an era of family-owned papers, although consolidation was already occurring and corporate ownership and publicly traded ventures were yet to come.

The last piece in the book, “A Free Press?”, was written for the Dartmouth Alumni Magazine, and what a piece it is! This single article should be back in print and part of every School of Journalism’s curriculum. It reads like it could have been written yesterday, and before there was the much bandied-about term “fake news”, Liebling was taking the press to task for publishing things that just weren’t true. And he describes the owners and their political agendas. He clearly wanted the public to be aware of who these people are and to seek out a number of news sources to (hopefully) get an idea of what is really going on. He includes a footnote relating an idea of Albert Camus’ to have a newspaper that is published after the dailies that computes the probability of the truth of each article based on analysis of a database of owner and reporter past records of accuracy. But there’s much more to this excellent article.

This is fascinating stuff for anyone left in America who actually cares about a free and responsible press.
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Gemarkeerd
nog | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 4, 2024 |
Definitely for fans of Liebling's prose, but also a chance to read him in a fairly straight reporting mode. Liebling went to Reno to establish residency so he could divorce his first wife, who was severely schizophrenic. While staying at a guest ranch on the Paiute reservation at Pyramid Lake, he learned about the struggle the Paiutes were having with getting some white squatters off their land. Now, this was in 1949, but the dispute had been going on since at least 1924, when Congress had passed a bill allowing the squatters to buy the land -- but they never paid up (they weren't even the original squatters, who dated back to 1864!). Enter Senator Pat McCarran in 1937, who seemingly suffered from an obsessive disorder that over the course of almost two decades caused him to introduce at least seven bills that would have awarded the squatters with Native American land.

Liebling wrote four long articles in the New Yorker in 1955 covering the saga, which are gathered here. We learn a great deal about some of the tribal leaders, the couple running the guest ranch, advocates for the Paiutes in the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and even get long snippets of McCarran's disingenuous blathering from multiple Senate hearings. It's all done with the usual Liebling aplomb. I found this (possibly the most obscure volume of his writing) at my local library; it was published by the University of Nevada Press in 2000, but, remarkably, it is still available for purchase.

It's a great example of a single mean-spirited politician and the amount of federal tax dollars and time squandered in a lost cause, one that was designed to benefit one man and his career. Not to mention the Paiutes' reduced abilities to live on their own land (the squatters took the best).

By the way, cutthroat trout disappeared from Pyramid Lake when Derby Dam was built in 1905. Thankfully, they are back thanks to a reintroduction effort by the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Paiute tribe.
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Gemarkeerd
nog | Jan 4, 2024 |
Mollie is a very short story (just over an hour of reading time) that was apparently one of AJ Liebling's columns or articles for the New Yorker that someone decided to make into an audiobook. It's a fascinating story looking into the life and identity of one soldier who Liebling never actually met while alive but researched into to discover.

It's a nice read, it's just kind of odd that it's a stand alone thing; would fit better into a collection?
 
Gemarkeerd
Blackshoe | Dec 18, 2023 |

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Werken
30
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21
Leden
2,176
Populariteit
#11,784
Waardering
4.0
Besprekingen
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ISBNs
70
Talen
3
Favoriet
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