Reporting at Wit's End: Tales from The New Yorker

Author:   St Clair McKelway
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781608190348


Pages:   640
Publication Date:   16 February 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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Reporting at Wit's End: Tales from The New Yorker


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Author:   St Clair McKelway
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 4.10cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.540kg
ISBN:  

9781608190348


ISBN 10:   160819034
Pages:   640
Publication Date:   16 February 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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Reviews

Nobody tells a story better than [McKelway] does. --P.G. Wodehouse McKelway was a born writer and an inspired writer. --William Shawn St. Clair McKelway was a fine practitioner of literary journalism. He had a knack for digging up eccentric subjects and polishing them into characters that shine in memory. I was a young McKelway fan, and it's a great pleasure now to see him back in print. --Gay Talese A rogue's gallery of shady, quirky, beguiling figures populates this scintillating collection of essays by one of the New Yorker's seldom-sung masters. His limpid style and wry humor make these pieces as fresh and engaging as the day they appeared. --Publishers Weekly The best essays and articles from a longtime New Yorker writer too long relegated to the shadows cast by A. J. Liebling and Joseph Mitchell, distinguished by vintage portraits of a long-gone NYC. --Barnes and Noble Review A lovely, funny, sad collection of [McKelway's] work. Throughout 'Reporting at Wit's End, ' his voice is slyly funny, subtly learned, and as slickly styled as his dark blond hair. Locating sense in nonsense may have been McKelway's greatest gift: out of oddness, he crafted a most unusual art. --Columbia Journalism Review Reporting at Wit's End...was my favorite book in 2010... The eighteen stories in this collection... are all pieces that transcend time. And, if there is any justice, their re-publication should earn McKelway, at long last, a place alongside Joseph Mitchell, Gay Talese, Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe as one of the masters of literary nonfiction. --David Grann, Salon This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. --San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End...assembles 18 of McKelway's longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure... [A] tremendous collection, which, if there's any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned. --Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the [New Yorker] had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work. But if McKelway remains perhaps the greatest magazine writer that no one knows about, the publication of a new collection, Reporting at Wit's End, brings with it the hope that his long-forgotten byline might be brought back to light. --Los Angeles Times McKelway's writing is deliciously detailed, subtle and wry, full of keen observations and connections. Readers who are fans of the New Yorker or great storytelling in general will appreciate this book. --Booklist A generous new anthology...with eighteen of [McKelway's] articles from the magazine and an introduction by Adam Gopnik, puts his work within reach once again, and high time. --New Yorker Nobody tells a story better than [McKelway] does. P.G. Wodehouse McKelway was a born writer and an inspired writer. William Shawn St. Clair McKelway was a fine practitioner of literary journalism. He had a knack for digging up eccentric subjects and polishing them into characters that shine in memory. I was a young McKelway fan, and it's a great pleasure now to see him back in print. Gay Talese A rogue's gallery of shady, quirky, beguiling figures populates this scintillating collection of essays by one of the New Yorker 's seldom-sung masters. His limpid style and wry humor make these pieces as fresh and engaging as the day they appeared. Publishers Weekly The best essays and articles from a longtime New Yorker writer too long relegated to the shadows cast by A. J. Liebling and Joseph Mitchell, distinguished by vintage portraits of a long-gone NYC. Barnes and Noble Review A lovely, funny, sad collection of [McKelway's] work. Throughout Reporting at Wit's End, ' his voice is slyly funny, subtly learned, and as slickly styled as his dark blond hair. Locating sense in nonsense may have been McKelway's greatest gift: out of oddness, he crafted a most unusual art. Columbia Journalism Review Reporting at Wit's End... was my favorite book in 2010... The eighteen stories in this collection... are all pieces that transcend time. And, if there is any justice, their re-publication should earn McKelway, at long last, a place alongside Joseph Mitchell, Gay Talese, Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe as one of the masters of literary nonfiction. David Grann, Salon This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End assembles 18 of McKelway's longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure... [A] tremendous collection, which, if there's any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned. Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the [New Yorker] had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work. But if McKelway remains perhaps the greatest magazine writer that no one knows about, the publication of a new collection, Reporting at Wit's End, brings with it the hope that his long-forgotten byline might be brought back to light. Los Angeles Times McKelway's writing is deliciously detailed, subtle and wry, full of keen observations and connections. Readers who are fans of the New Yorker or great storytelling in general will appreciate this book. Booklist A generous new anthology with eighteen of [McKelway's] articles from the magazine and an introduction by Adam Gopnik, puts his work within reach once again, and high time. New Yorker Nobody tells a story better than [McKelway] does. --P.G. Wodehouse McKelway was a born writer and an inspired writer. --William Shawn St. Clair McKelway was a fine practitioner of literary journalism. He had a knack for digging up eccentric subjects and polishing them into characters that shine in memory. I was a young McKelway fan, and it's a great pleasure now to see him back in print. --Gay Talese A rogue's gallery of shady, quirky, beguiling figures populates this scintillating collection of essays by one of the New Yorker 's seldom-sung masters. His limpid style and wry humor make these pieces as fresh and engaging as the day they appeared. --Publishers Weekly The best essays and articles from a longtime New Yorker writer too long relegated to the shadows cast by A. J. Liebling and Joseph Mitchell, distinguished by vintage portraits of a long-gone NYC. --Barnes and Noble Review A lovely, funny, sad collection of [McKelway's] work. Throughout 'Reporting at Wit's End, ' his voice is slyly funny, subtly learned, and as slickly styled as his dark blond hair. Locating sense in nonsense may have been McKelway's greatest gift: out of oddness, he crafted a most unusual art. --Columbia Journalism Review Reporting at Wit's End... was my favorite book in 2010... The eighteen stories in this collection... are all pieces that transcend time. And, if there is any justice, their re-publication should earn McKelway, at long last, a place alongside Joseph Mitchell, Gay Talese, Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe as one of the masters of literary nonfiction. -- David Grann, Salon This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. --San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. -San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End ...assembles 18 of McKelway's longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure... [A] tremendous collection, which, if there's any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned. -Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the [New Yorker] had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work. But if McKelway remains perha


<p>&#8220;This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon.&#160; Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s.&#8221;&#160; &#8212;San Francisco Chronicle <p>&#8220; Reporting at Wit's End &#8230;assembles 18 of McKelway&#8217;s longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure...&#160; [A] tremendous collection, which, if there&#8217;s any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned.&#8221; &#160;&#8212;Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review <p>&#8220;When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the&#160;[New Yorker]&#160;had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work.&#160; But if McKelway remains perha


Nobody tells a story better than [McKelway] does. --P.G. Wodehouse McKelway was a born writer and an inspired writer. --William Shawn St. Clair McKelway was a fine practitioner of literary journalism. He had a knack for digging up eccentric subjects and polishing them into characters that shine in memory. I was a young McKelway fan, and it's a great pleasure now to see him back in print. --Gay Talese A rogue's gallery of shady, quirky, beguiling figures populates this scintillating collection of essays by one of the New Yorker's seldom-sung masters. His limpid style and wry humor make these pieces as fresh and engaging as the day they appeared. --Publishers Weekly The best essays and articles from a longtime New Yorker writer too long relegated to the shadows cast by A. J. Liebling and Joseph Mitchell, distinguished by vintage portraits of a long-gone NYC. --Barnes and Noble Review A lovely, funny, sad collection of [McKelway's] work. Throughout 'Reporting at Wit's End, ' his voice is slyly funny, subtly learned, and as slickly styled as his dark blond hair. Locating sense in nonsense may have been McKelway's greatest gift: out of oddness, he crafted a most unusual art. --Columbia Journalism Review Reporting at Wit's End...was my favorite book in 2010... The eighteen stories in this collection... are all pieces that transcend time. And, if there is any justice, their re-publication should earn McKelway, at long last, a place alongside Joseph Mitchell, Gay Talese, Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe as one of the masters of literary nonfiction. --David Grann, Salon This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. --San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End...assembles 18 of McKelway's longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure... [A] tremendous collection, which, if there's any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned. --Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the [New Yorker] had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work. But if McKelway remains perhaps the greatest magazine writer that no one knows about, the publication of a new collection, Reporting at Wit's End, brings with it the hope that his long-forgotten byline might be brought back to light. --Los Angeles Times McKelway's writing is deliciously detailed, subtle and wry, full of keen observations and connections. Readers who are fans of the New Yorker or great storytelling in general will appreciate this book. --Booklist A generous new anthology...with eighteen of [McKelway's] articles from the magazine and an introduction by Adam Gopnik, puts his work within reach once again, and high time. --New Yorker Nobody tells a story better than [McKelway] does. P.G. Wodehouse McKelway was a born writer and an inspired writer. William Shawn St. Clair McKelway was a fine practitioner of literary journalism. He had a knack for digging up eccentric subjects and polishing them into characters that shine in memory. I was a young McKelway fan, and it's a great pleasure now to see him back in print. Gay Talese A rogue's gallery of shady, quirky, beguiling figures populates this scintillating collection of essays by one of the New Yorker 's seldom-sung masters. His limpid style and wry humor make these pieces as fresh and engaging as the day they appeared. Publishers Weekly The best essays and articles from a longtime New Yorker writer too long relegated to the shadows cast by A. J. Liebling and Joseph Mitchell, distinguished by vintage portraits of a long-gone NYC. Barnes and Noble Review A lovely, funny, sad collection of [McKelway's] work. Throughout Reporting at Wit's End, ' his voice is slyly funny, subtly learned, and as slickly styled as his dark blond hair. Locating sense in nonsense may have been McKelway's greatest gift: out of oddness, he crafted a most unusual art. Columbia Journalism Review Reporting at Wit's End... was my favorite book in 2010... The eighteen stories in this collection... are all pieces that transcend time. And, if there is any justice, their re-publication should earn McKelway, at long last, a place alongside Joseph Mitchell, Gay Talese, Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe as one of the masters of literary nonfiction. David Grann, Salon This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End assembles 18 of McKelway's longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure... [A] tremendous collection, which, if there's any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned. Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the [New Yorker] had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work. But if McKelway remains perhaps the greatest magazine writer that no one knows about, the publication of a new collection, Reporting at Wit's End, brings with it the hope that his long-forgotten byline might be brought back to light. Los Angeles Times McKelway's writing is deliciously detailed, subtle and wry, full of keen observations and connections. Readers who are fans of the New Yorker or great storytelling in general will appreciate this book. Booklist A generous new anthology with eighteen of [McKelway's] articles from the magazine and an introduction by Adam Gopnik, puts his work within reach once again, and high time. New Yorker Nobody tells a story better than [McKelway] does. --P.G. Wodehouse McKelway was a born writer and an inspired writer. --William Shawn St. Clair McKelway was a fine practitioner of literary journalism. He had a knack for digging up eccentric subjects and polishing them into characters that shine in memory. I was a young McKelway fan, and it's a great pleasure now to see him back in print. --Gay Talese A rogue's gallery of shady, quirky, beguiling figures populates this scintillating collection of essays by one of the New Yorker 's seldom-sung masters. His limpid style and wry humor make these pieces as fresh and engaging as the day they appeared. --Publishers Weekly The best essays and articles from a longtime New Yorker writer too long relegated to the shadows cast by A. J. Liebling and Joseph Mitchell, distinguished by vintage portraits of a long-gone NYC. --Barnes and Noble Review A lovely, funny, sad collection of [McKelway's] work. Throughout 'Reporting at Wit's End, ' his voice is slyly funny, subtly learned, and as slickly styled as his dark blond hair. Locating sense in nonsense may have been McKelway's greatest gift: out of oddness, he crafted a most unusual art. --Columbia Journalism Review Reporting at Wit's End... was my favorite book in 2010... The eighteen stories in this collection... are all pieces that transcend time. And, if there is any justice, their re-publication should earn McKelway, at long last, a place alongside Joseph Mitchell, Gay Talese, Joan Didion and Tom Wolfe as one of the masters of literary nonfiction. -- David Grann, Salon This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. --San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End This generous collection of his work for the magazine spanning four decades should, by any rights, restore this supremely gifted, prolific, droll and idiosyncratic writer to his deserved place in the pantheon. Reporting at Wit's End represents the range of McKelway's talents and preoccupations from the 1930s to the 1960s. -San Francisco Chronicle Reporting at Wit's End ...assembles 18 of McKelway's longer pieces from the 1930s to the 1960s, and every one of them is a treasure... [A] tremendous collection, which, if there's any justice, will begin the process of winning him back the fame he long ago earned. -Craig Seligman, New York Times Book Review When he was on his game, McKelway might have been the best nonfiction writer the [New Yorker] had -- this at a time when Liebling, Mitchell and E.J. Kahn Jr. were also producing signature work. But if McKelway remains perha


Author Information

Author Website:   http://www.bloomsbury.com/Authors/details.aspx?tpid=12540

St. Clair McKelway came from a family of newspaper journalists and ministers. Born in 1905, in Charlotte, NC, he grew up in Washington, DC, and worked his first job as an office boy at the old Washington Times-Herald. He went on to report and edit for the New York World, the New York Herald Tribune, and the Chicago Tribune. He eventually became a staff writer at the New Yorker, where he wrote for thirty years, and its managing editor from 1936-1939. He married five times, each of the marriages ending in divorce, and died in 1980 at the age of 74.

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Author Website:   http://www.bloomsbury.com/Authors/details.aspx?tpid=12540

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