About this item
Highlights
- Contemporary publishing, e-media, and writing owe much to an unsung hero who worked in the trenches of the culture industry (for pulp magazines, Hollywood films, and advertising) and caroused and collaborated with the avant-garde throughout the first half of the twentieth century.
- About the Author: Craig Saper is Professor in the Language, Literacy, and Culture Doctoral Program at UMBC.
- 320 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Literary Figures
Description
About the Book
Biography of Robert Carlton "Bob" Brown, avant-garde publisher, poet and reading machine inventor, bestselling pulp fiction and Hollywood movie treatment writer, cookbook author with Cora and Rose Brown, advertiser copyrighter, editorial board member of the Masses, curator of A Museum of Social Change, and much more.Book Synopsis
Contemporary publishing, e-media, and writing owe much to an unsung hero who worked in the trenches of the culture industry (for pulp magazines, Hollywood films, and advertising) and caroused and collaborated with the avant-garde throughout the first half of the twentieth century. Robert Carlton Brown (1886-1959) turned up
in the midst of virtually every significant American literary, artistic, political, and popular or countercultural movement of his time--from Chicago's Cliff Dweller's Club to Greenwich Village's bohemians and the Imagist poets; from the American vanguard expatriate groups in Europe to the Beats. Bob Brown churned out pulp fiction and populist cookbooks, created the first movie tie-ins, and invented a surreal reading machine more than seventy-five years ahead of e-books. He was a real-life Zelig of modern culture.
Review Quotes
"A cross between an intellectual biography of this literary dynamo and a picaresque novel. Bob Brown has found a sensitive, insightful, and appreciative biographer who not only knows how to narrate (and condense) his amazing adventures but also how to draw the connections that make this overflowing life of letters seem all the more meaningful and significant in our era of digital multimedia."-----Louis Kaplan, University of Toronto
"Outstanding. In many ways, this is much more than a biography of one Bob Brown; it is a biography of a lost twentieth century."-----Craig Dworkin, The University of Utah
Bob Brown, a mostly forgotten figure of the first half of the twentieth century, was nonetheless an original, one of the most colorful and versatile individuals of his time. Publisher, inventor, poet, cookbook writer, pulp fiction writer, self-proclaimed 'fiction machine, ' revolutionary, world traveler, Greenwich Village bohemian, European expatriate -- you name it and Brown lunged at it with both hands. Though today largely a footnote to other people's stories, Brown has finally gotten a book of his own, a meticulously researched work that traces the rollicking life and times of a larger-than-life individual while also offering a whirlwind tour through every important cultural and political movement of his era.-----Constance Rosenblum, author of Gold Digger: The Outrageous Life and Times of Peggy Hopkins Joyce
About the Author
Craig Saper is Professor in the Language, Literacy, and Culture Doctoral Program at UMBC.