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Constant Reader

The New Yorker Columns 1927–28

Foreword by Sloane Crosley
Published by McNally Editions
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
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About The Book

Dorothy Parker’s complete weekly New Yorker column about books and people and the rigors of reviewing.

When, in 1927, Dorothy Parker became a book critic for the New Yorker, she was already a legendary wit, a much-quoted member of the Algonquin Round Table, and an arbiter of literary taste. In the year that she spent as a weekly reviewer, under the rubric “Constant Reader,” she created what is still the most entertaining book column ever written. Parker’s hot takes have lost none of their heat, whether she’s taking aim at the evangelist Aimee Semple MacPherson (“She can go on like that for hours. Can, hell—does”), praising Hemingway’s latest collection (“He discards detail with magnificent lavishness”), or dissenting from the Tao of Pooh (“And it is that word ‘hummy,’ my darlings, that marks the first place in The House at Pooh Corner at which Tonstant Weader Fwowed up”).

Introduced with characteristic wit and sympathy by Sloane Crosley, Constant Reader gathers the complete weekly New Yorker reviews that Parker published from October 1927 through November 1928, with gimlet-eyed appreciations of the high and low, from Isadora Duncan to Al Smith, Charles Lindbergh to Little Orphan Annie, Mussolini to Emily Post

Excerpt

Table of Contents
Foreword by Sloane Crosley

October 1, 1927

The Highly Recurrent Mr. Hamilton—Al Smith, and How He Grew—Bad News of May Sinclair

October 8, 1927

Mrs. Colby's Second Novel --The Private Papers of the Dead--The Philosopher Takes a Long Look at Himself

October 15, 1927

An American Du Barry—A Biography of Henry Ward Beecher

October 22, 1927

Re-enter Margot Asquith—Something Young—A Masterpiece from the French

October 29, 1927

A Book of Great Short Stories—Something About Cabell

November 5, 1927

The Professor Goes in For Sweetness and Light Short Stories from One Who Knows How to Do Them—Sketches, Mostly Unpleasant—A Biography of a Much-Talked-About Lady

November 12, 1927

Mr. Morley Capers on a Toadstool—Mr. Milne Grows to be Six

November 19, 1927

Adam and Eve and Lilith and Epigrams—Something More About Cabell

November 26. 1927

Madame Glyn Lectures on “It,” with Illustrations

December 3, 1927

The Most Popular Reading Matter

December 10, 1927

The Socialist Looks at Literature—A Lyricist Looks at His Neighbors

December 17, 1927

The Short Story, Through a Couple of the Ages

December 31, 1927

Mrs. Post Enlarges on Etiquette

January 7, 1928

More Troubles for Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh

January 14, 1928

Poor, Immortal Isadora

January 28, 1928

Re-enter Miss Hurst, Followed by Mr. Tarkington

February 4, 1927

A Good Novel, and a Great Story

February 11, 1928

Literary Rotarians

February 18, 1928

Excuse It, Please

February 25, 1928

Our Lady of the Loudspeaker

March 10, 1928

Unfinished Endeavors

March 17, 1928

The Compleat Bungler

March 24, 1928

Ethereal Mildness

March 31, 1928

A Very Dull Article, Indeed

April 7, 1928

Mr. Lewis Lays It on with a Trowel

April 14, 1928

Mrs. Norris and the Beast

April 21, 1928

These Much Too Charming People

May 19, 1928

Hard-Boiled Virgins Are Faithful Lovers

May 26, 1928

Mr. See Sees It Through

August 25, 1928

Back to the Book-Shelf

September 15, 1928

Duces Wild

September 29, 1928

How it Feels to be One Hundred and Forty-six

October 20, 1928

Far from Well

November 17, 1928

Wallflower’s Lament

About The Author

Dorothy Parker née Rothschild (1898–1967), grew up on New York’s Upper West Side. She became famous for her comic poems, her short stories, her reviews, and her repartée, as recorded by the columnist Wolcott Gibbs over lunches at the Algonquin hotel. A prolific magazine contributor in her youth and a successful screenwriter (she co-wrote the original A Star is Born), she struggled all her life with alcoholism and wrote very little in her later decades, though continued to be a vocal champion of progressive causes, especially civil rights.

Product Details

  • Publisher: McNally Editions (November 5, 2024)
  • Length: 224 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781961341258

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Raves and Reviews

“Does anyone know how hard it is to be that funny? . . . Read her book reviews. Read them now and see how good they are.”

– Fran Lebowitz

“In Parker’s hands, the humble book review becomes an instrument as expressive as a lyric poem.”

– Nicholas Frankel, Wall Street Journal, Five Best Books by Great Wits

“All I wanted in this world was to come to New York and be Dorothy Parker. The funny lady. The only lady at the table. The woman who made her living by her wit . . . Who always got off the perfect line at the perfect moment, who never went home and lay awake wondering what she ought to have said because she had said exactly what she ought to have.”

– Nora Ephron, Esquire

“The Constant Reader columns are not really book reviews; they are standup-comedy routines. You don’t have to listen to her opinion, she says. If she didn’t like the book, maybe that’s just her hangover speaking.”

– Joan Acocella, New Yorker

“Can anyone ever get too much of Dorothy Parker? . . . Here is the happy news that McNally Editions is republishing her book column “Constant Reader,” from The New Yorker, a gig that lasted only a year but whose critiques read as fresh and as wonderful as when they first appeared, in the late 1920s . . . Sloane Crosley provides a witty and perceptive foreword.”

– Jim Kelly, Air Mail, Editor’s Picks

“What gives her writing its peculiar tang is her gift for seeing something to laugh at in the bitterest tragedies of the human animal.”

– Somerset Maugham

“A bestselling poet who moved on to fiction, Dorothy Parker . . . was equally innovative as a critic, pioneering a first-person style and busting the taboo on hatchet jobs by women . . . She was arguably the first female celebrity wit since the 17th century, outperforming her illustrious male peers.”

– John Dugdale, The Guardian

“It is through Parker’s refusal to claim authority, then, that her book reviews achieve it. She presents readers with an unpretentious, sometimes self-mocking voice that, while it expresses strong opinions, pretends no Olympian knowledge or status. Her use of humor is even-handed: she uses it to make fun of shallow, silly, or just plain bad published work, but she also turns it on herself . . . And, as a bonus, the reviews contain some of her own best, most spirited writing, which is the reason, finally, that we continue to read them with such pleasure.”

– Nancy A. Walker, Studies in American Humor

“Length doesn’t increase depth, necessarily, and just because her little characterizations of a book were short doesn’t mean they weren’t true.”

– Gloria Steinem

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