A. J. Liebling

@Writers, Family and Life

A

Oct 18, 1904

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: October 18, 1904
  • Died on: December 28, 1963
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Columbia University, Media Personalities, Journalists, Writers
  • Spouses: Mary Anne Quinn
  • Universities:
    • Columbia University
    • Columbia University
    • Dartmouth College
  • Notable Alumnis:
    • Columbia University

A. J. Liebling born at

New York City

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Birth Place

In 1934, he married Ann Beatrice McGinn, a former movie theater ticket taker. His wife, who had grown up in an orphanage suffered from either manic depression or schizophrenia, which caused her to have hallucinations and go into fugue states. Both of them committed infidelities during the marriage which ultimately ended in divorce.

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Personal Life

His second marriage was to Lucille Spectorsky, the ex-wife of Auguste Comte Spectorsky, in 1949. This marriage too was unhappy and ended in divorce.

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Personal Life

He tied the knot for the third time with author Jean Stafford.

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Personal Life

Abbott Joseph "A. J." Liebling was born on October 18, 1904, in New York City into a well-to-do family. His father, a Jewish immigrant from Austria was penniless when he arrived at the U.S. He established himself as a prosperous furrier and married a girl hailing from a Jewish family in San Francisco.

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Childhood & Early Life

After completing his primary education, Joe—as A. J. Liebling preferred to be called—got enrolled at the Dartmouth College in the fall of 1920. There he wrote regularly for the ‘Jack-O-Lantern’, Dartmouth's nationally known humor magazine. However, he left Dartmouth without graduating. He then began studying at the School of Journalism at Columbia University.

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Childhood & Early Life

A. J. Liebling began his career as a journalist at the ‘Evening Bulletin’ of Providence, Rhode Island. He also worked in the sports department of the ‘New York Times’, although for a brief time; he was supposedly fired from this job.

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Career

Liebling's father wanted him to study in Paris for a year. Thus Liebling suspended his career as a journalist in 1926 and sailed to Europe to study French medieval literature at the Sorbonne in Paris. Once there, he developed a great interest in the French lifestyle, especially the food and drinks.

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Career

He returned to the U.S. in 1927 and began writing for the ‘Journal’. Then he moved to New York and attempted to get a job on Joseph Pulitzer's ‘New York World’. He wrote for the ‘World’ in 1930–31 and the ‘World-Telegram’ from 1931–35. During this period he also got married though the union was not a happy one.

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Career

A. J .Liebling joined Harold Ross’s ‘The New Yorker’ in 1935 and would be associated with the newspaper till his death several years later. After the outbreak of the World War II, he was sent to Paris as a war correspondent. He also travelled to Africa and England over the course of the war, covering many stories. His war time articles were collected in ‘The Road Back to Paris’ (1944).

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Career

After the war he returned to regular journalism. For several years, he wrote a monthly feature called ‘Wayward Press’ for ‘The New Yorker’ in which he analyzed the U.S. press. A big fan of sports like boxing, he was also an avid foodie with a love for horse racing. These were some of the topics he frequently wrote about.

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Career

A journalist of international renown, Liebling’s work as a war correspondent during the World War II was much acclaimed. He covered the early battles in Paris in 1940, and flew to Britain in 1941 to cover the happenings there. Then he went to Algeria in 1942 to cover the fighting on the Tunisian front.

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Major Works