cover image Firebrand:: The Life of Horace Liveright

Firebrand:: The Life of Horace Liveright

Tom Dardis, Thomas Dardis. Random House (NY), $27.5 (394pp) ISBN 978-0-679-40675-4

Horace Liveright (1884-1933) lingers as one of the greats in U.S. publishing, though many in the business today would be hard put to remember why. This study by Dardis (Some Time in the Sun) puts him back into sharp focus: with initial ambitions as a playwright, Liveright went instead into the staid world of publishing near the end of WWI (almost simultaneously with Alfred Knopf) and shook it to its foundations. He was a hard-drinking gambler who loved books and authors, took great pleasure in their successes, nursed them in their failures, was always good for a handout in the form of an unearnable advance and was, in Ezra Pound's words, ``a jewel of a publisher.'' Pound was one of his authors; he also published Eliot's The Waste Land, launched Faulkner, Hemingway and the Modern Library (which he sold to Bennett Cerf), stuck by Sherwood Anderson and Theodore Dreiser long after they became unprofitable, nurtured Bertrand Russell and had Nathanael West on his last list. He also battled censorship at a time when other publishers had no stomach for the fight. What brought Liveright low, after a dazzling 12-year run, was his profligacy. His offices, full of booze and chorus girls, looked like the scene of one long party, and profits from his frequent bestsellers seemed to melt away. What with his stock-market fliers, his attempts to be a Broadway producer and his unending generosity to his authors, Liveright's course lay steadily downward. Dardis tells his story with unfailing narrative drive and a fine blend of immediacy and perspective. Photos. (July)