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Like its immediate predecessor, Happy Days (about his boisterous Baltimore childhood), this is a book of reminiscences -a rollicking account of Henry Mencken's start and rapid rise in journalism from 1899 to 1906. Interspersed are hilarious portraits of tavernkeepers, politicians, cops and other period fauna...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mencken at 61 | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

...Mencken was city editor of the Baltimore Morning Herald at 23, managing editor of the Evening Herald at 25. His greatest feat was to write, after close study of maps and ship names, an imaginary account of the Russo-Japanese naval battle at Tsushimi, which coincided so closely with the actual news trickling in two weeks later that he scored a fortnight's beat on the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mencken at 61 | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

...biggest story was the Baltimore fire in 1904, which lasted ten days and gutted the heart of the city. During that "electric week" Mencken worked one stretch of 64½ hours while the Herald, its plant burned down, was printed in three different cities. When it was over Mencken felt older than he does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mencken at 61 | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

...author of Prejudices, Notes on Democracy, In Defense of Women, The American Language, etc., is aware that he has entered what he calls his "autumnal-years." He is not the riproaring Mencken of the 1920s, when his name was on the lips of every undergraduate literatus, when newspapermen were supposed to carry copies of the Mercury in their hip pockets along with their liquor flasks, and when he himself was scorching Fundamentalists at the Scopes trial, sitting up all night with characters like Rudolph Valentino, and lalloping around Manhattan with Ernest Boyd and Jim Huneker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mencken at 61 | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

...Mencken is still a newspaperman. He stopped writing regularly for the Baltimore Sunpapers early this year, but he still covers an occasional story as a reporter. He is also a director of the Sunpapers, and is now conducting the management's negotiations with the Newspaper Guild. Most afternoons Mencken drops in at the Sun office, chats with cronies-President Paul Patterson, Editor-in-Chief John Owens, and a character called "The Bentztown Bard," who gets out a column of Biblical quotations, homely recipes and small-town chitchat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mencken at 61 | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

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