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Rating:  Summary: Am loving every page of this book Review: Even more than Kunkel's brilliant biography "Genius in Disguise," this book offers special insights into "New Yorker" founder and editor Harold Ross, not only a seminal figure in American letters but a sardonic wit reminiscent of H.L. Mencken, one of the people with whom he frequently exchanged letters. (Indeed, the sweep of his correspondence, from "New Yorker" stalwarts like E.B. White and his wife Katherine to Dorothy Parker and James Thurber all the way to John O'Hara, Harpo Marx, various state governors and other polticos, President Truman, and Premier Nehru, is impressive in itself.) While in many of these letters, Ross comes across as that curmudgeon one might expect, there is a touch of tender concern in others that shows you that some of the gruffness was merely a pose--as is his stance as the long-suffering, embattled editor who says he would rather be doing anything else, but who clearly shows he is having the time of his life.The book may be a bit abstruse in places for those who do not know the history of the "New Yorker" during the Ross editorship, but there seems to be enough comedy throughout to maintain even a casual reader's interest. Anyone who has enjoyed "Genius in Disguise" will surely love this book. I guess the greatest complement I can offer is now that I've read Kunkel's two Ross portrayals, I can't wait for his next book.
Rating:  Summary: An Entertaining Literary Anthology, Laugh Out Loud Funny Review: Even more than Kunkel's brilliant biography "Genius in Disguise," this book offers special insights into "New Yorker" founder and editor Harold Ross, not only a seminal figure in American letters but a sardonic wit reminiscent of H.L. Mencken, one of the people with whom he frequently exchanged letters. (Indeed, the sweep of his correspondence, from "New Yorker" stalwarts like E.B. White and his wife Katherine to Dorothy Parker and James Thurber all the way to John O'Hara, Harpo Marx, various state governors and other polticos, President Truman, and Premier Nehru, is impressive in itself.) While in many of these letters, Ross comes across as that curmudgeon one might expect, there is a touch of tender concern in others that shows you that some of the gruffness was merely a pose--as is his stance as the long-suffering, embattled editor who says he would rather be doing anything else, but who clearly shows he is having the time of his life. The book may be a bit abstruse in places for those who do not know the history of the "New Yorker" during the Ross editorship, but there seems to be enough comedy throughout to maintain even a casual reader's interest. Anyone who has enjoyed "Genius in Disguise" will surely love this book. I guess the greatest complement I can offer is now that I've read Kunkel's two Ross portrayals, I can't wait for his next book.
Rating:  Summary: More praise for LETTERS FROM THE EDITOR Review: Here are some more words from the critics on Thomas Kunkel's beautifully edited selection of the letters of the inimitable Harold Ross: "The letters . . . consistently convey the distinctive clarity of Ross's voice. . . . So much controversy has lately surrounded the post-Ross eras of The New Yorker that to read this volume is to experience a prelapsarian Eden. . . . Ross combined his virility with his fussiness, the qualities that made him so contradictory as well as the supremely great editor he became."-The New York Times "Letters from the Editor should be read simply for pleasure, in which it abounds. . . . A read-aloud, or read-across-the-room, sort of book. . . . Ross always sounded like himself, which is the whole trick. . . . A refreshing and unironic anthology."-Roger Angell, The New Yorker "The New Yorker's ornery founder wrote as well as he edited and to recipients as varied as E. B. White and Harpo Marx."-Newsweek (4 stars) "Fascinating, fierce, funny."-Atlanta Journal-Constitution "Letters from the Editor, masterfully edited by Thomas Kunkel, is an absolute delight: the letters reveal in unflinching detail a man of uncompromising, if somewhat blinkered vision, a man who treasured humor, wit, and style. . . . Amply demonstrates why this witty and urbane journal has managed to stay on the newsstand shelf for, lo, these many years."-Denver Rocky Mountain News "A breezy romp through a quarter-century of The New Yorker's history. . . . Ross's letters reveal an articulate, keen intellect possessed by a tough, pragmatic, embattled editor who is everywhere at once. . . . By turns serious, whimsical, gossipy, pointed, and irascible. . . . The recipients of these missives comprise an astonishing who's who. . . . Ross biographer Kunkel has skillfully linked the letters with commentaries to trace The New Yorker's evolution. . . . Reading these letters is like eavesdropping on a beehive of creative activity."-Publishers Weekly
Rating:  Summary: Am loving every page of this book Review: I've long been a fan of The New Yorker altho the drawings and not the too lengthy articles are my favorites now. Have read most of the books about working at the magazine, but this is the best. Harold Ross had such a way with words. I particularly liked the letter of sympathy to E.B. White (page 97) upon death of White's father: "...after you get to be thirty people you know keep dropping off all the time and it's a hell of a note." And about Christmas: "...it always comes at the very worse moment in the year for me." Here is truly a genius at work. I thought it was ironic also that although he said don't waste time writing letters as you don't get paid for them, he wrote them so well. It is also interesting that the editor of this book finally found some recordings that Ross made and he was dictating letters! I recommend this book for anyone who enjoys The New Yorker and would like to know how it developed over the years.
Rating:  Summary: Worth reading--because Ross is worth reading Review: Most of the text is Ross's; this is what makes the book worth 4 stars. Some of the explanatory comments are pretty clumsy: "Married to Fleischmann's ex-wife, Ruth, a major New Yorker stockholder, Vischer played a strong behind-the-scenes role at the magazine and was trying to keep Ross from quitting." (p. 271) Would a sentence like that have ever made the pages of the New Yorker? I can't comment on the selection of letters with any authority, but it's at least adequate: Truman Capote progresses from someone who, in September 1944, "wouldn't have been employed here [even] as [an office boy] probably, if it hadn't been for the man- and boy-power shortage" (Capote had insulted Robert Frost by walking out on poetry reading) to somone whose stories Ross would like to see more of, if they "aren't too psychopathic" in July 1949.
Rating:  Summary: Worth reading--because Ross is worth reading Review: Most of the text is Ross's; this is what makes the book worth 4 stars. Some of the explanatory comments are pretty clumsy: "Married to Fleischmann's ex-wife, Ruth, a major New Yorker stockholder, Vischer played a strong behind-the-scenes role at the magazine and was trying to keep Ross from quitting." (p. 271) Would a sentence like that have ever made the pages of the New Yorker? I can't comment on the selection of letters with any authority, but it's at least adequate: Truman Capote progresses from someone who, in September 1944, "wouldn't have been employed here [even] as [an office boy] probably, if it hadn't been for the man- and boy-power shortage" (Capote had insulted Robert Frost by walking out on poetry reading) to somone whose stories Ross would like to see more of, if they "aren't too psychopathic" in July 1949.
Rating:  Summary: Here's to literacy Review: Ross's legendary gruffness and expansive curiosity are revealed in this wonderful book. Kunkel's superb biography of Ross, "Genius in disguise," deserved this follow-up, in which the subject speaks for himself. He is as lively a letter-writer as ever lived, making one wish that email weren't the washed out modern excuse for correspondence that it so often is. Read it; then go and read the old New Yorkers on microfilm at the university library. Sensational.
Rating:  Summary: Alive in His Letters Review: These letters were my companion as I read "Genius in Disguise", Kunkel's wonderful biography of Harold Ross. The biography tells the story of Ross and his founding and development of The New Yorker. These letters bring Ross to life and convey the personality that spotted and nurtured the talent that made the magazine great. Here's a quick letter to John Cheever in 1947, which gives a little flavor of the man: "Dear Cheever: I've just read "The Enormous Radio," having gone away for a spell and got behind, and I send my respects and admiration. The piece is worth coming back to work for. It will turn out to be a memorable one, or I am a fish. Very wonderful, indeed." As ever, Ross
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