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Prejudices, First Series

Mencken sharpens his pen and in a collection of short essays delivers acerbic opinions on issues and persons of the time. Among his targets in this volume (the first of six) are critics, H.G. Wells Thorstein Veblen, Arnold Bennett, William Dean Howells, Irvin S. Cobb. Mencken's critiques are delivered against a background of his own well known ethnic, racial, religious, and sectional prejudices. (It is said that the only thing Mencken loved about the Southern United States was his wife, who hailed from Alabama.) Not for the faint of heart, Mencken's prickly, yet unapologetic, prose reveals a window into American attitudes at the time they were written and their influences on the larger American culture. - Summary by DrPGould (7 hr 0 min)

Chapters

Criticism of Criticism of Criticism

The Late Mr. Wells

Arnold Bennett

The Dean

Professor Veblen

The New Poetry Movement

The Heir of Mark Twain

Hermann Sudermann

George Ade

The Butte Bashkirtseff

Six Members of the Institute

The Genealogy of Etiquette

The American Magazine

The Ulster Polonius

An Unheeded Law-Giver

The Blushful Mystery

George Jean Nathan

Portrait of an Immortal Soul

Jack London

Among the Avatars

Three American Immortals