Harold Loeb

Harold Albert Loeb (1891–1974) was an American writer, notable as an important American figure in the arts among expatriates in Paris in the 1920s. In 1921 he was the founding editor of the international literary and art magazine, Broom, which was first published in New York.

Early life, education, marriage and the war

Harold Albert Loeb was born into a wealthy Jewish family in New York City. His mother, Rose, was related to the Guggenheims, and his father, Albert, was a successful investment banker with Kuhn, Loeb & Company. Harold was a maternal cousin of Peggy Guggenheim. The young Loeb attended Princeton University, where he earned his B.A. in 1913. After earning his degree, he moved to Empress, Alberta, Canada, working on a ranch and later laying concrete for the Canadian Pacific Railway.[1]

In 1914, he returned to New York, where he married Marjorie Content, daughter of a wealthy stockbroker and his wife. They returned to a rural life in Alberta for a period, where their son and daughter were born in 1915 and 1916, respectively.[2]

The United Kingdom's declaration of war on Germany made it impossible for Loeb to continue working as a foreigner in Canada. In 1917, the Loebs returned to New York.[3] The next year, Loeb moved to San Francisco, where he worked for the Guggenheims as a purchaser for the American Smelting and Refining Company. When the United States entered the war, Loeb joined the military. Due to his poor eyesight, Loeb was not sent overseas but assigned to a desk job in New York.[4]

The Sunwise Turn Bookstore and Broom

After the war, Loeb became partial owner in New York of the bookstore The Sunwise Turn. While working at the Sunwise Turn, he met several authors including F. Scott Fitzgerald, Laurence Vail, and Malcolm Cowley.

He also met his future business partners Alfred Kreymborg and Lola Ridge. They started their office for Broom in the basement of Loeb's wife's brownstone. In 1921, Loeb convinced Kreymborg to become a joint partner and publish Broom magazine. Loeb sold his share of the Sunwise Turn bookstore. He moved to Rome to begin publication of the magazine in Europe.

Loeb separated from Marjorie Content in 1921, and their divorce was completed in 1923.

Editorial vision

In the May 1922 issue of Broom, Loeb published his essay, "Foreign Exchange," which defined his editorial vision.[5] After this issue, Loeb began publishing more American writers, including John Dos Passos, Laurence Vail, E.E. Cummings, Gorham Munson, Robert Coates and Matthew Josephson.[6] In September 1922, Loeb published the article, "The Mysticism of Money." In October 1922, Loeb announced the magazine's move to Berlin, a center of artistic activity in Europe. In March 1923, left Broom and moved to Paris to work on his writing.

Paris

While in Paris, Loeb spent time with numerous American expatriates, writers and artists, including Ernest Hemingway. In his The Sun Also Rises (1926), a roman à clef, Hemingway used Loeb partially as a model for his character Robert Cohn, and his British mistress, Duff, Lady Twysden, as inspiration for the character of Brett Ashley. In his 1959 memoir, Loeb later wrote about this period, and of being involved in boxing and bullfights with Hemingway.

Before returning to New York in 1929, Loeb published his first two novels, Doodab (1925) and The Professors Like Vodka (1927). He continued to write, publishing his third novel Tumbling Mustard in 1929.

Later years

Loeb published two non-fiction books in the 1930s, addressing the United States' political and social issues during the Great Depression. He published a memoir, The Way It Was (1959). In the 1960s, he published essays about writers Ford Madox Ford and Hemingway, and about their times in Paris. He also wrote a review of Carlos Baker's 1969 biography of Hemingway. In 1969, he edited an anthology of work published originally in Broom.

Loeb married and divorced three more times after his marriage to Marjorie Content. In addition to his affair with Duff Twysden, he was involved with Kathleen Eaton Cannell. Continuing to travel frequently, he died in Marrakesh in 1974.[7]

Published books

Articles

Notes

  1. Sarason, 1980, p. 251
  2. Sarason, 1980, p. 251
  3. Sarason, 1980, p. 251
  4. Kondritzer, 1984, p. 4; Sarason 1980, p. 251
  5. Sarason, 1980, p. 253
  6. Sarason, 1980, p. 253
  7. Sarason, 1980, p. 255

References

External links

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