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Mollie and Other War Pieces

Mollie and Other War Pieces( )
Author: Liebling, A. J.
Liebling, A.
ISBN:978-0-8032-8031-1
Publication Date:Mar 2004
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Imprint:Bison Books
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $15.95
Book Description:

A. J. Liebling's coverage of the Second World War for the New Yorker gives us a fresh and unexpected view of the war--stories told in the words of the soldiers, sailors, and airmen who fought it, the civilians who endured it, and the correspondents who covered it.

The hero of the title story is a private in the Ninth Army division known as Mollie, short for Molotov, so called by his fellow G.I.s because of his radical views and Russian origins. Mollie was famous for...
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Book Details
Pages:286
Detailed Subjects: History / Wars & Conflicts / World War Ii / European Theater
History / Wars & Conflicts / World War Ii / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6 x 9 Inches
Book Weight:0.649 Pounds
Author Biography
Liebling, A. J. (Author)
A. J. Liebling was an urbane and prolific journalist whose style, incorporating first-person narrative, street talk, and exuberant metaphor, became a model for the New Journalism of the 1960's and later. Although he came from a genteel New York family, he was fascinated by the irreverent underworld all his life and made it his special subject.

After being expelled from Dartmouth College for refusing to attend chapel, Liebling graduated from Columbia University's Pulitzer School of Journalism in 1925 and then worked for various newspapers, including The New York Times, which fired him, and the New York World, before he found his metier at The New Yorker magazine in 1935. It was there that he developed his signature style and did his best work, writing about a wide range of subjects, from the city's characters to gastronomy to boxing to the London Blitz and the Normandy invasion. A born raconteur with a fertile imagination, Liebling carved out a territory between objective reporting and fiction, which so many other journalists have mined since. Yet he could also produce straight war reportage fine enough to merit receiving the Legion of Honor from a grateful France in 1952.

Starting in 1945, Liebling wrote a widely admired column for The New Yorker called "The Wayward Pressman," in which he criticized American journalism's priorities and performance. This was probably the first such column in U.S. journalism. During the 1950s and 1960s, he also wrote book reviews for Esquire. Besides his massive newspaper and magazine output, Liebling wrote about 20 books. He was married three times, the last time to the writer Jean Stafford.

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