PDF Download , by Thomas Kunkel
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, by Thomas Kunkel
PDF Download , by Thomas Kunkel
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Product details
File Size: 9524 KB
Print Length: 497 pages
Publisher: Random House; 1st edition (April 17, 2013)
Publication Date: April 17, 2013
Sold by: Random House LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B00C0AM04M
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#317,285 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
Usually I wouldn't use the words "charming" and "curmudgeon" to describe a person because it seems as if the two words would cancel each other out, but I think they are great words to describe Harold Ross, founder and long-time editor of The New Yorker. Charming would refer to someone who was upbeat and funny and "on" most of the time, whereas curmudgeon would describe someone who was grouchy and ornery. He could be both of these, as well as brilliant and a host of other descriptive words.I have read The New Yorker for years and am so glad I finally read ABOUT the magazine, because it is endlessly fascinating. How I wish I had known Harold Ross with his innate intelligence and superior sense of humor! It would appear he could do everything and anything with the exception of marriage. He adored his daughter and celebrated his friends and his magazine up until the very end, which of course came years too soon. He is way up there on my list of people I would want on a desert island! This was such a fun book to read, and I am now heading to the other books that have been written about The New Yorker and everyone involved with it, especially Harold Ross.
This wonderful biography tells the story of Harold Ross, The New Yorker's founding editor, and his making and management of this magazine from 1925 until his death in 1951. In the book, Kunkel often takes the position, popular in Ross's time, that Ross's success was improbable, since he was, basically, a tramp newspaperman with a poor education, before he came to New York to build his career in publishing. But throughout his life, Ross made great professional (not personal) choices. And, he had a formidable intellect and curiosity, terrific taste, integrity, and an eye for talent.In part, Ross was underestimated in his lifetime because he had the unfashionable style in the office of a neurotic worrier. Here's Ogden Nash describing the publisher on the job: "His expression is always that of a man who has just swallowed a bug. Once a day at least he calls you into his office and says, "This magazine is going to hell." He never varies the phrase. Then he says, "We haven't got any organization. I'm licked. We've got too many geniuses around and nobody to take any responsibility. He has smoked five cigarettes while saying that. Then he takes a drink of water, prowls up and down, cries "My God!" loudly and rapidly, and you go out and try to do some work." A captivating book.
The strongest parts of this book are about how this unlikely man handled great writers and their egos and built a signature publication. It's at its weakest when it drops names and goes on about celebrities. The writing is tight and Kunkel doesn't shy away from difficult topics.
Genius in Disguise is the kind of biography which is entertaining beyond the limits of its subject matter. Even someone who would not think that they would enjoy a biography of a media figure should find a lot to like in this engaging book.Using anecdote, history, and a wide range of sources, Kunkel paints a picture of Ross as a man, which in turn teaches us a lot about the New Yorker and the magazine industry. It is published with The New Yorker Prospectus, an article called "Theory and Practice of Editing New Yorker Articles", and Ross Query Sheets as appendices. Additionally, Kunkel provides a selected bibliography with helpful pointers to further reading.This book would make a good companion piece to Remembering Mr. Shawn's New Yorker by Ved Mehta. I would recommend it for fans of The New Yorker, people interested in the Algonquin Round Table, or simply for anyone with an appreciation for well-written literary biography.
This is a book that I tried to read as slowly as possible. Because it is a book to savor. And because I did not want it to end. Kunkel so beautifully captured the age of The New Yorker (and how its celebration and critique of its city became a celebration and critique of life and the world). I wish I had not taken to so long to find and fall in love with this book. It is splendid.
An excellent portrait of the man, and the difficulty of establishing a glossy magazine. Ross would probably be exasperated but amused that this, "little old lady from Dubuke," has read the New Yorker for decades.
This is great book if you're a fan of The New Yorker, a writer, editor, or just enjoy a good biography. Mr. Ross was a very interesting character, and his handling of great writers and their egos when he was their editor was absolutely perfect.
harold ross was a genuine character! the biography is well written and shows his personal life.i really recommend it to fans of the new yorker.
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