In January 1991 the Enoch Pratt Free Library opened the sealed manuscript of H.L. Mencken's "Thirty-Five Years of Newspaper Work". Written in 1941-42 and bequeathed to the library under time-lock upon Mencken's death in 1956, it is among the very last of his papers opened to the public. "Thirty-Five Years of Newspaper Work", a one-volume edition of highlights from the manuscript, pictures the excitement of newspaper life in the heyday of print journalism. Here Mencken recalls his years - mostly with the Baltimore "Evening Sun" - as a reporter and a writer of editorials that always caused a stir among the public and riots of indignation among his enemies. The volume includes important new materials on his coverage of presidential candidates from 1929 to 1940 (Mencken on Harding's inaugural address: "a string of wet sponges") and the 1925 trial of the man he called "the infidel Scopes". Mencken also describes his brief stint as a war correspondent on Germany's sub-zero Eastern Front in 1917 and the perilous voyage back, which took him through Havana just as a revolution was breaking out. (He stayed to cover it).
He writes about the "inevitable" war and likely fate of Germany's Jews during a final visit to his ancestral homeland in summer 1938. And he describes colourful Baltimore personalities, shares local gossip, and offers candid - usually unflattering - portraits of the politicians and clerics he mostly despised.
- ISBN10 0801847915
- ISBN13 9780801847912
- Publish Date 1 August 1994
- Publish Status Out of Stock
- Out of Print 9 January 2001
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 416
- Language English