| The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. |
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| Lardner, Ring |
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| (Ringgold Wilmer Lardner), 18851933, American humorist and short-story writer, b. Niles, Mich. He was a sports reporter in Chicago, St. Louis, and Boston from 1907 to 1919. His first collection of short stories, You Know Me, Al (1916) revealed his talent for the racy sports idiom he made famous. Among his other early volumes of short stories are Gullibles Travels (1917) and Treat Em Rough (1918). With the publication of How to Write Short Stories (with Samples) (1924), Lardners reputation as a satirist was established. Usually cynical and pessimistic, his stories are peopled by ordinary charactersbaseball players, stenographers, barberswho are stunningly revealed, often through their own conversation, as being stupid, dull, and vicious. His later story collections include What of It? (1925) and First and Last (1934). With George S. Kaufman he collaborated on the comedy June Moon (produced 1929). | 1 | | See his Best Short Stories (1938, repr. 1957); his autobiography, The Story of a Wonder Man (1927, repr. 1975); biographies by D. Elder (1956) and J. Yardley (1984); studies by M. Geismar (1972) and E. Evans (1980); bibliography by M. J. Bruccoli and R. Layman (1976). | 2 |
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| | | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2007 Columbia University Press. |
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