Harold Loeb (1891–1974)
Author of The Professors Like Vodka (Lost Amer Fiction Series)
About the Author
Image credit: Man Ray
Works by Harold Loeb
Life in a Technocracy: What It Might Be Like (Utopianism and Communitarianism) (1996) 10 copies, 1 review
Broom 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Loeb, Harold Albert
- Birthdate
- 1891
- Date of death
- 1974
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Princeton University (BA)
- Occupations
- editor
novelist
essayist
memoirist - Relationships
- Guggenheim, Peggy (cousin)
Hemingway, Ernest (friend) - Short biography
- Harold Loeb was born in New York City. His father Albert Loeb was an investment banker with the firm Kuhn, Loeb & Company, and his mother Rose was born a Guggenheim: Peggy Guggenheim was a cousin. Loeb graduated from Princeton University in 1913 and then went to Alberta, Canada, where he worked on a ranch and did other physical labor. In 1914, he returned to New York, where he married Marjorie Content, daughter of a wealthy stockbroker. The couple had two children and lived in rural Alberta for a while, until the outbreak of World War I necessitated their return to the USA. After the war, he became part owner of an avant-garde bookstore, The Sunwise Turn. Through the store, he met a number of writers, including F. Scott Fitzgerald and Malcolm Cowley. In 1921, Loeb separated from his wife and co-founded Broom, a literary magazine, moving to Rome to begin publishing it in Europe for the sake of economy. He edited and published early works by Marianne Moore, Hart Crane, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, and E. E. Cummings, among others. A couple of years later, he left Broom and moved to Paris to focus on his own writing. There he met other American expatriates, including writers and artists such as Ernest Hemingway. He had an affair with Lady Duff Twysden and accompanied Hemingway and his circle to the bullfights in Pamplona in 1925. Hemingway later used thinly-disguised versions of them as the characters of Robert Cohn and Lady Brett Ashley in his novel The Sun Also Rises. Loeb published his first two novels, Doodab (1925) and Professors Like Vodka (1927) while living in Paris. He continued to write after he returned to New York in 1929. He published two non-fiction books in the 1930s, and essays about writers Ford Madox Ford and Hemingway and their times in Paris. His memoir The Way It Was appeared in 1959.
- Cause of death
- heart attack
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- New York, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- Paris, France
New York, New York, USA
Alberta, Canada - Place of death
- Marrakech, Morocco
- Map Location
- USA
Members
Reviews
Written during the 1930s; the premise is that we don't lack the capacity to produce enough, but rather that the distribution is flawed and inefficient. The critique over distribution isn't entirely lacking merit, but as always with these utopian schemes, the solution given is less than appealing.
Current governments are almost a model of inefficiency so the politicians would have to go unless kept for "showmanship" without any real power; monopolies are wonderful as having one mega company show more per industry sector is more efficient than having 50 companies competing with each other. A new medium of exchange is also recommended: Ergs - given as a ration and then priced via the amount of energy used per product produced. This might be an engineer's utopia if you follow this author, but it isn't a view I share.
Nonetheless still a worthwhile read. Technocracy; while it isn't pure Communism, certainly draws some elements from it. The disdain for democracy is well evident; voting by the people must go in such a brave new world. When one reviews such modern day calls for "agile governance" one certainly sees certain ideas of technocracy that still exist in the present day. show less
Current governments are almost a model of inefficiency so the politicians would have to go unless kept for "showmanship" without any real power; monopolies are wonderful as having one mega company show more per industry sector is more efficient than having 50 companies competing with each other. A new medium of exchange is also recommended: Ergs - given as a ration and then priced via the amount of energy used per product produced. This might be an engineer's utopia if you follow this author, but it isn't a view I share.
Nonetheless still a worthwhile read. Technocracy; while it isn't pure Communism, certainly draws some elements from it. The disdain for democracy is well evident; voting by the people must go in such a brave new world. When one reviews such modern day calls for "agile governance" one certainly sees certain ideas of technocracy that still exist in the present day. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 37
- Popularity
- #390,571
- Rating
- 3.2
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 5

