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A collection of short stories by H.L. Mencken, many of which appear for the first time since their original publication a century ago.
Perhaps America's foremost literary stylist and most mordant wit, H.L. Mencken's most engaging writing told about his own life and experiences. In Mencken on Mencken, S.T. Joshi has assembled a hefty collection of the best of Mencken's autobiographical pieces that have not appeared previously in book form.
Written in 1941-42, these highlights capture the excitement of newspaper life in the heyday of print journalism.
With a renowned style, Mencken shook politics and politicians for nearly half a century. This collection of 70 political pieces drawn from Mencken's Monday columns in the "Baltimore Evening Sun" during the 1920s and 1930s shows the "Sage of Baltimore" at his satirical best.
Controversial even before it was published in 1930, Treatise on the Gods collects Mencken's scathing commentary on religion.
These thirty-five essays-each a stick of dynamite with a burning fuse-have been selected from six volumes originally published between 1919 and 1927.
In the second volume of his autobiography, Mencken recalls his years as a young reporter.
Mencken covers a range of subjects, from Hoggie Unglebower, the best dog trainer in Christendom, to his visit to the Holy Land, where he looked for the ruins of Gomorrah.
Here Mencken recalls memories of a safe and happy boyhood in the Baltimore of the 1880s.
In 1956, at the end of his career, Mencken had produced three volumes of memoirs and steady stream of journalism. For this book, he collected those pieces he thought most true, most pertinent, or most likely to blow the dust from the reader's brain.
H. L. Mencken's reputation as a journalist and cultural critic of the twentieth century has endured well into the twenty-first. His early contributions as a writer, however, are not very well known. He began his journalistic career as early as 1899 and in 1910 cofounded the Baltimore Evening Sun.
H. L. Mencken was one of the leading literary, social, and cultural critics of the 1910s, '20s, and '30s. However, very few of his literary reviews have been reprinted in any form prior to their appearance in this volume.H.
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