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Hardcover Mencken: The American Iconoclast Book

ISBN: 0195072383

ISBN13: 9780195072389

Mencken: The American Iconoclast

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Book Overview

A towering figure on the American cultural landscape, H.L. Mencken stands out as one of our most influential stylists and fearless iconoclasts--the twentieth century's greatest newspaper journalist, a famous wit, and a constant figure of controversy.
Marion Elizabeth Rodgers has written the definitive biography of Mencken, the most illuminating book ever published about this giant of American letters. Rodgers captures both the public and the...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

This biography is not just for the Mencken devotee

Mencken was such a brilliant political, social, cultural and literary commentator that just reading this excellent biography left me exhausted and jealous. Has this country ever had another literary figure like this? Perhaps, in a few ways, Mark Twain had attained H.L.'s public stature, though I confess I have yet to read a biography of Samuel Clemons. But Twain was low-brow, while Mencken was high-brow. Will it ever again see someone like him? Highly unlikely, in the New Media environment of mimeographed sound bites, shrill blogs, shrinking newspapers, and vanishing magazines. I'm equally jealous of Marion Elizabeth Rodgers. Her research is very impressive, and though several Mencken aficionados critique parts of her work in other reviews on this site, I, as a fellow writer, am humbled by her ability to weave her massive research into a coherent, well-organized, enjoyable narrative of a very complex, conflicted man. Mencken, deservedly so, appears to have a following of scholars and others who have made him their "hobby," some of whom have written very helpful reviews on this site. What a fascinating entertainment! But Mencken and his times, as revealed in this book, are well worth an investment of time by the rest of us, the "amateurs," if only for a few weeks. The prose is very accessible, the story of his life flows steadily through a narrative arc, and it prompted me to reflect on my own life and the life of our country from the turn of the century through WWII. Aren't we all, both individually and collectively, somewhat conflicted and complicated, like H.L.? In short, we "amateurs" ought to set out to know Mencken better and Ms. Rodgers has made that task a pleasant one.

very enjoyable, very well researched, somewhat uncritical

A few weeks before graduating from Goucher College, Marion Elizabeth Rodgers stumbled accross the papers of H.L. Mencken's wife. One thing led to another, and the eventual result was this long, meticulously researched, and very enjoyable biography of one of the most interesting Americans to live in the last century. My purpose is not to regurgitate H.L. Mencken's prodigious and fascinating life and works, from being the first lexicographer of the American language to his phenomenal career as a thinker and wit, etc., etc. which Marion Rodgers so ably covers. Suffice it to write that Mencken's cogitations have greatly enriched my life. The one quibble that I have with this book is that she clearly is captivated by Mencken's charm - few aren't - perhaps to the point that she elides a few probing questions about the less happy aspects of Mencken's Werke. Mencken lived to write invective and provoke; many of the targets of his acidic pen, such as creationists, cult leaders, quack healers, racists, warmongers and more deserved all the sarcasm he sent there way. Mencken even established a commission to determine which state of the union was the most backward and least hospitable; the conclusion was for Arkansas, perhaps not coincidentally, the Arkansas legislature passed a motion urging Mencken's deportation. People, after all, decide what they do and in what they believe, and many people are quicker to learn when humor is used to reinforce an idea. I am sure that his harangues did a lot of good. Mencken, however, went a further, and though he was far more racially tolerant than many of his contemporaries, wrote tracts of invective against different races, which employed stereotypes that are not accepted in polite society today. Rather than insinuate that Mencken either disproved his ideas by his deeds, or that these ideas were a child of his times, I think this book would have been a lot more interesting had it asked whether it was fair for Mencken to turn his caustic pen lose on people for things which they could not change, and for which they were not responsible. Even in his day, I would imagine, it was hitting below the belt line to do so. If you want a great, but mildly adulatory, biography of the Sage of Baltimore, look no further.

Superb biography on a master of civil rights and language...

Mencken has long been one of my favorite persons to quote. Ever since I got my first quote book when I was about 11, and have been attracted to those who are able to say so much in such superb, yet small ways...Mencken has always been up there with Twain, Ambrose Bierce, my scientists Einstein and Feynman, Will Rodgers. Notice something about this group? They all lived within the same time period: around the time my parents were growing up. Yet, I am sure if I had been alive then with my family's upbringing, I may never have been introduced to the writings of these men, especially Mencken who wrote for magazines, journals and the newspapers. I didn't know very much about him, but grabbed this book as soon as I could. Yeah, he was a greatly flawed individual, especially in his relationships with women, and with friends. Show me a 'great' man who wasn't flawed in significant ways. But here was a man who knew how to draw attention to the important problems of the time. There were a great many similarities between WWI and this time period with the Iraquian War. The wars were not the same, except in being run by those far from the front, and being paid for by the young men of our country. A lot of the other stuff has not changed. Stupid men in places of political power, such as the ambassador to Germany at that time, stated things that were totally untrue, but helped to draw our country into that war. Not that we didn't need to be involved in that war...but like Mencken, I have the absolute need to hear the absolute truth from my politicians, and from the media (which often doesn't happen now). Many of the civil rights that we take for granted, including freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from fear in our own homes are again at risk. Mencken did what he was in the power to do; reach the minds of Americans through print and put into plain and poignant words the facts regarding our freedoms. Mencken stood up for the rights of African-Americans during a very dangerous time period, when lynching was an accepted form of justice in the U.S. and when the KKK had way too much power. This from a white man who lived well in Baltimore. Not only that, but he helped to bring to the fore the writings of important African-American literature, and made possible the future writings of those today such as August Wilson and Maya Angelou (probably spelling this wrong). Mencken was like so many at the time, existing with blinders on his eyes concerning Hitler and his ability to control mobs. Like so many, including most Jews in Europe, Mencken thought Hitler was such a crackpot that no one could possibly take him seriously, but he didn't allow for the fact that the Allies devastated Germany, leaving her in a position where mob leadership was accepted. This is one of the most exquisitely written biographies I have ever read. Definitely up there with our local Pittsburgh favorite, David McCullough. I will wait with curiousity for the next biography from th

The definitive biography of Mencken

In this meticulous, sumptuous biography, destined to be the definitive study, Marion Elizabeth Rodgers resurrects H.L. Mencken, the journalist, observer, critic, enemy of cant, champion of freedom, with an authority that marks this work as a classic. With equal measure of intellect and sympathy, Ms. Rodgers brings this complex, brilliant, almost elemental figure to vivid life on the page. As her portrait suggests, the public Mencken was constitutionally unable to let charlatans and hypocrites have the last word. His visceral loathing of fools, rare in his day, more rare perhaps, in ours, kept Mencken at his desk for more than fifty years, in the face of Prohibition, the Scopes Monkey Trial, two world wars, not to mention the relentless drone of censors that seems to be a staple of mass culture. Much to her credit, Ms. Rodgers does not neglect the paradoxical qualities of her subject in the service of his legend. The contradictions that often bedevil expansive, complicated minds emerge here in significant detail. It is fascinating to witness this astute observer of political life, a connoisseur of knaves and tyrants, let his sentimental attachment to his German ancestry blind him to the early menace of Hitler. The fact that Mencken, who deplored bigotry, harbored a distasteful prejudice against Jews, emerges in Ms. Rodgers portrait in unvarnished form. Similarly, the romantic Mencken who found a fulfilling marriage in his later years with an accomplished woman, often behaved less than honorably in his numerous romantic entanglements. Curiously, the famous man of letters, the sophisticated participant on the world stage, lived in one house virtually all his life. That he cleaved to Baltimore, a city vibrantly alive in these pages, tells us something about his imperishable attachments. One can argue that it was Mencken's good fortune to live in a time when the collective stupidites that were his natural material flowed in abundance. Today, almost fifty years after his death, his luck continues. Mencken has attracted the sustained attention of a biographer who seems to know her subject better than Mencken knew himself. Ms. Rodgers narrative is by turns lively, poignant, always riveting. It catches, by indirection, the strivings, idealism, corruption, and spectacle of America at the first half of the twentieth century. Always in the background one hears the cacophany of shrill voices engaged in the running arguments that abound in a democracy. At the center of it all, apoplectic but still cheering, was Mencken, a defender of freedom above all else. To rediscover him in these pages, railing against conformists and their craven leaders is to desperately want him back, now, in these treacherous times, to once again raise his voice against demogogues in high places. In this volume, he is with us, as he was, - flawed, indomitable, witty, magnetic. It is no small matter that Ms. Rodgers returns him to us with an elegance that is notably absent from other
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