A. J. Liebling
A. J. Liebling | |
---|---|
Born |
Abbott Joseph Liebling October 18, 1904 New York City |
Died |
December 28, 1963 59) New York City | (aged
Cause of death | Bronchopneumonia |
Occupation | Journalist |
Spouse(s) |
Ann Beatrice McGinn (1934-1949; divorced) Lucille Spectorsky (1949-1959; divorced) Jean Stafford (1959-1963; his death) |
Abbott Joseph "A. J." Liebling (October 18, 1904 – December 28, 1963) was an American journalist who was closely associated with The New Yorker from 1935 until his death.
Biography
Liebling was born into a well-off family on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where his father worked in New York's fur industry. His mother, Anna Adelson Slone, was from San Francisco. After early schooling in New York, Liebling was admitted to Dartmouth College in the fall of 1920. His primary activity during his undergraduate career was as a contributor to the Jack-O-Lantern, Dartmouth's 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. After finishing there, he began his career as a journalist at the Evening Bulletin of Providence, Rhode Island. He worked briefly in the sports department of the New York Times, from which he supposedly was fired for listing the name "Ignoto" (Italian for "unknown") as the referee in results of games.
In 1926, Liebling's father asked if he would like to suspend his career as a journalist to study in Paris for a year.
I sensed my father's generous intention and, fearing that he might change his mind, I told him that I didn't feel I should go, since I was indeed thinking of getting married. "The girl is ten years older than I am," I said, "and Mother might think she is kind of fast, because she is being kept by a cotton broker from Memphis, Tennessee, who only comes North once in a while. But you are a man of the world, and you understand that a woman can't always help herself..." Within the week, I had a letter of credit on the Irving Trust for two thousand dollars, and a reservation on the old Caronia for late in the summer, when the off-season rates would be in effect.[1]
Liebling later wrote that the unsuitable proposed marriage was a fiction intended less to swindle his father than to cover his own pride at being the recipient of such generosity.[2]
Thus in summer 1926, Liebling sailed to Europe where he studied French medieval literature at the Sorbonne in Paris. By his own admission[2] his devotion to his studies was purely nominal, he seeing the year as a chance to absorb French life and appreciate French food. Although he stayed for little more than a year, this interval inspired a lifelong love for France and the French, later renewed in his war reporting. He returned to Providence in autumn 1927 to write for the Journal. He then moved to New York, where he proceeded to campaign for a job on Joseph Pulitzer's New York World, which carried the work of James M. Cain and Walter Lippmann and was known at the time as "the writer's paper." In order to attract the attention of the city editor, James W. Barrett, Liebling hired an out-of-work Norwegian seaman to walk for three days outside the Pulitzer Building, on Park Row, wearing sandwich boards that read Hire Joe Liebling.[1] It turned out that Barrett habitually used a different entrance on another street, and never saw the sign. He wrote for the World (1930–31) and the World-Telegram (1931–35). He married Ann Beatrice McGinn, a former movie theater ticket taker he had met while she was working in Providence, Rhode Island, on July 28, 1934. McGinn suffered from either manic depression or schizophrenia, which caused her to have hallucinations and go into fugue states. Her illness required many lengthy and expensive hospital stays and when she was out of the hospital, she was often heavily sedated. Both Liebling and McGinn committed infidelities during their marriage.[3][4][5]
Liebling joined The New Yorker in 1935. His best pieces from the late thirties are collected in Back Where I Came From (1938) and The Telephone Booth Indian (1942).
During World War II, Liebling was active as a war correspondent, filing many stories from Africa, England, and France. His war began when he flew to Europe in October 1939 to cover its early battles, lived in Paris until June 10, 1940, and then returned to the United States until July 1941, when he flew to Britain. He sailed to Algeria in November 1942 to cover the fighting on the Tunisian front (January to May 1943). His articles from these days are collected in The Road Back to Paris (1944). He participated in the Normandy landings on D Day, and he wrote a memorable piece concerning his experiences under fire aboard a U.S. Coast Guard-manned landing craft off Omaha Beach. He afterwards spent two months in Normandy and Brittany, and was with the Allied forces when they entered Paris. He wrote afterwards: "For the first time in my life and probably the last, I have lived for a week in a great city where everybody was happy." Liebling was awarded the Cross of the Légion d'honneur by the French government for his war reporting.
Following the war he returned to regular magazine fare and for many years after he wrote a New Yorker monthly feature called "Wayward Press", in which he analyzed the US press. Liebling was also an avid fan of boxing, horse racing and food, and frequently wrote about these subjects. In 1947 he published The Wayward Pressman, a collection of his writings from The New Yorker and other publications. During the late forties, he vigorously criticized the House Un-American Activities Committee and became friends with Alger Hiss. In 1946 he and his wife separated. They divorced on August 30, 1949 in Reno, Nevada. Two days later he married Lucille Spectorsky, the ex-wife of Auguste Comte Spectorsky, in Virginia City, Nevada.[3] Spectorsky was described by Liebling's friend and New Yorker editor Gardner Botsford as "a big blonde from rural Kentucky, amiable if dumb."[5] Liebling and Spectorsky divorced in 1959 and he married author Jean Stafford that same year.[6][7]
In 1961, Liebling published The Earl of Louisiana, originally published as a series of articles in The New Yorker in which he covered the trials and tribulations of the governor of Louisiana, Earl K. Long, the younger brother of the Louisiana politician Huey Long.
On December 19, 1963, Liebling was hospitalized for Bronchopneumonia. He died on December 28 at Mount Sinai Hospital, and was buried in the Green River Cemetery, East Hampton, New York.[7]
Legacy
- Liebling's papers are archived at Cornell University.
- In 1995, the Boxing Writers Association of America created the A.J. Liebling Award. The first class of honorees included longtime Washington, D.C. sportswriters Sam Lacy and Shirley Povich.[8]
- In 2002, Sports Illustrated named The Sweet Science, a collection of Liebling's essays on boxing, the number one sports book of all time.[9]
- In 2008, the Library of America published a volume of Liebling's World War II writings. The book includes the essays The Road Back to Paris, Mollie and Other War Pieces, Normandy Revisited, as well as his uncollected war journalism.
- The journalist and sportswriter William "Bill" Heinz called Liebling "the best essayist." [10]
- Labeled Chicago as the "Second City".[11] It became a nickname for the city.
- The Library of America selected Liebling's 1955 New Yorker story “The Case of the Scattered Dutchman” for inclusion in its two-century retrospective of American True Crime writing, published in 2008.
- Friend and fellow New-Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell inherited Liebling's book library after his death, and recalls Liebling's once having used bacon as a bookmark.[12]
Quotes
Liebling is remembered for many quotes and aphorisms, such as:
- "Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one."
- "People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news."
- "I can write better than anybody who can write faster, and I can write faster than anybody who can write better."
- "The only way to write is well, and how you do it is your own damn business."
His writing was often memorable, as was his eating, and he nicely combined the two passions in Between Meals (1962), of which the following extract gives a taste:
In the restaurant on the Rue Saint-Augustin, Parisian actor and gourmand Yves Mirande would dazzle his juniors, French and American, by dispatching a lunch of raw Bayonne ham and fresh figs, a hot sausage in crust, spindles of filleted pike in a rich rose sauce Nantua, a leg of lamb larded with anchovies, artichokes on a pedestal of foie gras, and four or five kinds of cheese, with a good bottle of Bordeaux and one of champagne, after which he would call for the Armagnac and remind Madame to have ready for dinner the larks and ortolans she had promised him, with a few langoustes and a turbot — and, of course, a fine civet made from the marcassin, or young wild boar, that the lover of the leading lady in his current production had sent up from his estate in the Sologne. "And while I think of it," I once heard him say, "we haven't had any woodcock for days, or truffles baked in the ashes, and the cellar is becoming a disgrace — no more '34s and hardly any '37s. Last week, I had to offer my publisher a bottle that was far too good for him, simply because there was nothing between the insulting and the superlative."
Selected works
Books
- Liebling's War: the World War II Dispatches of A.J. Leibling; University of New Mexico Press, 2011 ed: ISBN 0-8263-4905-6)
- They All Sang: From Tony Pastor to Rudy Vallee, as told to Abbott J. Liebling by Edward B. Marks ; 1934, Viking Press;New York
- Back Where I Came From; 1938 (1990 North Point Press ed: ISBN 0-86547-425-7)
- The Telephone Booth Indian; 1942, Doubleday, Doran and Co.:Garden City, New York (2004 Broadway Books ed: ISBN 0-7679-1736-7)
- The Road Back to Paris; 1944 Doubleday, Doran and Co.:Garden City, New York (1997 Modern Library ed: ISBN 0-679-60248-8)
- The Wayward Pressman; 1947, Doubleday:Garden City, New York (1972 Greenwood Press ed: ISBN 0-8371-6173-8)
- Mink and Red Herring: The Wayward Pressman's Casebook;1949, Doubleday:Garden City, New York (1972 Greenwood Press ed: ISBN 0-8371-6174-6)
- Chicago: The Second City; 1952, Knopf: New York (2004 Univ of Nebraska Press ed: ISBN 0-8032-8035-1)
- The Honest Rainmaker: The Life and Times of Colonel John R. Stingo; 1953, Doubleday:Garden City, New York
- The Sweet Science; 1956, Viking Press: New York (1982 Penguin Books ed: ISBN 0-14-006191-6)
- Normandy Revisited; 1958, Simon & Schuster: New York
- The Press - Ballantine Books:[New York City|New York], 1961 (1975 Ballantine ed: ISBN 0-345-24396-X)
- The Earl of Louisiana, Louisiana State University Press:Baton Rouge, 1961 (ISBN 0-8071-0537-6)
- Between Meals: An Appetite for Paris - 1962 (1995 ed: ISBN 0-679-60142-2)
- Mollie and Other War Pieces - 1964 (posthumous) (2004 ed: ISBN 0-8032-8031-9)
- Just Enough Liebling 2004 (ISBN 0-374-10443-3) - A posthumous collection of his writings
- World War II Writings: The Road Back to Paris /Mollie and Other War Pieces / Uncollected War Journalism / Normandy Revisited, Pete Hamill, ed. (New York: Library of America, 2008) ISBN 978-1-59853-018-6
- The Sweet Science and Other Writings: The Earl of Louisiana / The Jollity Building / Between Meals / The Press, Pete Hamill, ed. (New York: Library of America, 2009) ISBN 978-1-59853-040-7
- "A Reporter At Large Dateline: Pyramid Lake, Nevada" originally published in The New Yorker, 1955, entitled "The Lake of the Cui-Ui Eaters", University of Nevada Press
Articles
- Liebling, A. J. (7 January 1950). "The Wayward Press: Aspirins for atoms, down with babushkas!". The New Yorker 25 (46): 52, 53–59. On The Chicago Tribune.
- Liebling, A. J. (21 January 1950). "The Wayward Press: "Dismally" was the word". The New Yorker 25 (48): 76–84. On New York City daily newspapers.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The New Yorker, March 29, 2004, p. 54.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Liebling, AJ (1986), Between the Meals, an Appetite for Paris, North Point Press, p. 63, ISBN 978-0-86547-236-5, LCCN 85-73123.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Liebling Divorced; Plans to Remarry". The New York Times. August 31, 1949.
- ↑ Gay, Timothy M. (2012). Assignment to Hell: The War Against Nazi Germany with Correspondents Walter Cronkite, Andy Rooney, A.J. Liebling, Homer Bigart, and Hal Boyle. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 9781101585382. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Remnick, David (March 29, 2004). "Reporting It All". The New Yorker.
- ↑ Chevalier, Tracy, ed. (1997). Encyclopaedia of the Essay. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. ISBN 9781135314101. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 "A.J. Liebling, Journalist and Critic, Dies at 59". The New York Times. December 29, 1963.
- ↑ George Kimball (2010-08-01). "Sam Lacy: Separate, But Unequalled". Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ Top sports books, Sports Illustrated, 2002.
- ↑ Wall Street Journal 5 Mar 2008: D9.
- ↑ Sarah S. Marcus. "Chicago's Twentieth-Century Cultural Exports". The Electronic Encyclopedia of Chicago. Retrieved 2009-04-19.
- ↑ http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/114087-1
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: A. J. Liebling |
- "A.J. Liebling's Delectable Political Jambalaya", by Jonathan Yardley, 20 January 2004, The Washington Post
- The Church of Liebling: The uncritical worshippers of America's best press critic
- "Not quite enough A.J. Liebling" by Allen Barra, Salon.com, Sept. 23, 2004
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