Marion Elizabeth Rodgers
Marion Elizabeth Rodgers is a scholar, author, and editor recognized as the foremost authority on H. L. Mencken.[1]
Mencken scholarship
Rodgers became interested in Mencken while researching Sara Haardt, who had attended Goucher College from whence Rodgers graduated in 1981. She discovered a trove of correspondences between Mencken and his eventual wife which she compiled and edited as the book Mencken and Sara: A Life in Letters: The Private Correspondence of H.L. Mencken and Sara Haardt.
Certainly Mencken’s name came up during the course of my studies. But my real introduction to Mencken was shortly before my graduation from Goucher College, in 1981, while I was researching the papers of Southern writer and alumna Sara Haardt, whom Mencken had married, thereby shattering his reputation as “America’s Foremost Bachelor.” I was putting away one of her scrapbooks in the vault of the library when I literally tripped over a box of love letters between her and Mencken. Taped to the top of the collection was a stern command, written by Mencken, that it was not to be opened until that very year. To say that my life changed at that moment would be an understatement. Suddenly, a door was swung open into Mencken’s life through the tender route of romantic correspondence. In those days my dream was to go to graduate school and write (yet another!) dull thesis on T. S. Eliot. Instead, I focused my degree on the Mencken/Haardt collection, promptly received a book contract, and became hooked.[2]
Rodgers has subsequently edited collections of essays by Mencken, and authored a lavishly praised Mencken biography. Joseph C. Goulden, founder of The Mencken Society, declared Rodgers’ book to be "the most superb and entertaining biography (in any field) that I’ve read in years.” Kirkus Reviews praised the book as “The best biography of Mencken to date.” The Blade found it to be “by far the best Mencken biography ever written...a masterpiece.” Publishers Weekly commended it as "a meticulous portrait of one of the most original and complicated men in American letters.”[3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
Personal life
Rodgers was born October 31, 1958 in Santiago, Chile, the daughter of Maria Arce Fernandez and William Livingston Rodgers. She has a sister, Linda, and a brother, William. Having met him at a tribute to the Baltimore Evening Sun, she married journalist Jules Witcover on June 21, 1997 in the rear garden of his historic home in Georgetown, in Washington, D.C.[10][11]
Selected works as author, editor, contributor
Books
- Mencken and Sara: A Life in Letters: The Private Correspondence of H.L. Mencken and Sara Haardt (McGraw-Hill Companies, 1987)
- The Impossible H.L. Mencken: A Selection of His Best Newspaper Stories, editor (Anchor, 1991)
- Mencken: The American Iconoclast (Oxford University Press, 2005)
- Notes on Democracy: A New Edition (by H. L. Mecken), introduction and annotation (Dissident Books, 2008)
- Prejudices: The Complete Series, editor and annotatation (Library of America 2010)
Articles
- By His Own Rules: H. L. Mencken, a cigar always in hand, was the most influential commentator of his time (Cigar Aficionado, Summer 1994)
- H.L. Mencken: Courage in a Time of Lynching (Nieman Reports, Summer 2006)
- The Last Trials of Clarence Darrow (review, The Washington Times, August 16, 2009)
- Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women (review, The Washington Times, November 1, 2009)
- Anne Frank: The Book, The Life, The Afterlife (review, The Washington Times, December 6, 2009)
- Mark Twain: Man in White: The Grand Adventure of His Final Years (review, The Washington Times, April 9, 2010)
- Animal Factory: The Looming Threat of Industrial Pig, Dairy, and Poultry Farms to Humans and the Environment (review, The Washington Times, April 23, 2010)
- The Savaging of Laura Ingalls Wilder (The American Spectator, July 6. 2018)
- Memories of Edmund Morris (The American Spectator, May 30, 2019)
- H.L. Mencken on Independence Day: 'We Have Borne Rascality Since 1776, and We Continue To Survive’ (Reason, July 3, 2019)
- The Alt-Right Loves H.L. Mencken. The Feeling Would Not Have Been Mutual. (Reason, September 12, 2018)
- H. L. Mencken: The German-American from Baltimore (speech to The Society for the History of Germans in Maryland, date unknown)
Interviews
- Writings of H.L. Mencken (C-SPAN, 2002)
- Mencken: The American Iconoclast (C-SPAN, 2005)
- Mencken and Making of an Ink-Stained Wretch (C-SPAN 2005)
- Marion Elizabeth Rodgers interview, 2006 (Connie Martinson Talks Books, 2006)
- The Library of America interviews Marion Elizabeth Rodgers about H. L. Mencken (2010)
- Book Interview: “Prejudices” Complete — The World According to H. L. Mencken (The Arts Fuse, October 26, 2010)
- Marion Elizabeth Rodgers on the new, expanded edition of H. L. Mencken’s autobiographical trilogy (2014)
- More Mencken (Baltimore City Paper, September 9, 2014)
References
- "Marion Elizabeth Rodgers". UMBC.edu. University of Maryland. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- Rich Kelley (September 2010). "The Library of America interviews Marion Elizabeth Rodgers about H. L. Mencken" (PDF). Library of America. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- Douglas Kennedy. "Mencken: The American iconoclast, by Marion Elizabeth Rodgers". independent.co.uk. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- Peter Preston. "Super hack". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- "The American Iconoclast". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- Martin F. Nolan. "A detailed portrait of editor, writer, and crusader H. L. Mencken". archive.boston.com. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- Joseph C. Goulden. "Mencken: The American Iconoclast: The Life and Times of the Bad Boy of Baltimore". washingtontimes.com. The Washington Times. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- John Lessenberry (January 13, 2006). "Mencken gets his masterpiece". toledoblade.com. Toledo Blade. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- "Mencken: The American Iconoclast". booktopia.com. August 10, 2007. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- "Rodgers, Marion Elizabeth 1958–". encyclopedia.com. Gale. 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- "3042 Q Street in Georgetown: Built in 1840 or 1940?". March 14, 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2019.