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H.L. Mencken Biography

Writer / Editor

Name at birth: Henry Louis Mencken

A reporter, columnist and editor for Baltimore's Sun papers (1906-48), H.L. Mencken was one of America's foremost men of letters during the first part of the 20th century. A sharp critic of hypocrisy in religion and politics, he was especially well-known in the 1920s for his witty and insightful commentaries on the wretchedness of humanity. He edited the satirical magazines The Smart Set (1914-23) and American Mercury (1925-33) (along with George Jean Nathan) and published collected essays (Prejudices, 6 volumes, 1919-27) and books, including the philological undertaking The American Language (1919). Less popular in his later years, in 1948 he suffered a stroke from which he never fully recovered. In recent years his literary reputation has suffered as a result of charges that he was a racist and anti-Semite.

Extra credit: Other notable American writers include Ambrose Bierce, Mark Twain and Rebecca West.

Four Good Links

A Mencken Cornucopia

Good resource for information, with some photos

The Mencken Society Homepage

Contact his Baltimore-based fan clubs

Gore Vidal on Mencken

A reprint of an introduction that puts Mencken in context

The Bard of Baltimore Speaks

Biography and related links to essays on Mencken

Vital Stats

Birth

12 September 1880

Birthplace

Baltimore, Maryland

Death

29 January 1956
(age 75)

Best Known As

Famously acerbic columnist for the Baltimore Sun