Best 44 quotes of A. J. Liebling on MyQuotes

A. J. Liebling

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    A. J. Liebling

    A city with one newspaper... is like a man with one eye, and often the eye is glass.

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    A. J. Liebling

    A Louisiana politician can't afford to let his animosities carry him away, and still less his principles, although there is seldom difficulty in that department.

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    A. J. Liebling

    An Englishman teaching an American about food is like the blind leading the one-eyed.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Any city may have one period of magnificence, like Boston or New Orleans or San Francisco, but it takes a real one to keep renewing itself until the past is perennially forgotten.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Chicago seems a big city instead of merely a large place.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Cynicism is often the shamefaced product of inexperience.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Forget that New Orleans is actually a little like the Combat Zone with French cooking, it still happens to be part of the great state of Louisiana where people play the political game the same way it's played in Lebanon. The place is one layer after another of tribes, factions and at least a million laughs.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Freedom of the press belongs to the man who owns one.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Henry Miller may write about revelers self-woven into a human hooked rug, because his ecstasy is solemn.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I can write better than anybody who can write faster, and I can write faster than anybody who can write better.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I can write better than anyone who can write faster.

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    A. J. Liebling

    If a boxer ever went as crazy as Nijinsky all the wowsers in the world would be screaming 'punch-drunk.' Well, who hit Nijinsky? And why isn't there a campaign against ballet? It gives girls thick legs

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    A. J. Liebling

    If the first requisite for writing well about food is a good appetite, the second is to put in your apprenticeship as a feeder when you have enough money to pay the check but not enough to produce indifference of the total.

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    A. J. Liebling

    If there is any way you can get colder than you do when you sleep in a bedding roll on the ground in a tent in southern Tunisia two hours before dawn, I don't know about it.

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    A. J. Liebling

    If you just try long enough and hard enough, you can always manage to boot yourself in the posterior.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I had an attack of the gout two days before pulling out, and I went limping off to the war instead of coming limping back from it.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I met a keen observer who gave me a tip: 'If you run across a restaurant where you often see priests eating with priests, or sporting girls with sporting girls, you may be confident that it is good. Those are two classes of people who like to eat well and get their money's worth.'

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    A. J. Liebling

    Inconsiderate to the last, Josef Stalin, a man who never had to meet a deadline, had the bad taste to die in installments.

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    A. J. Liebling

    In the light of what Proust wrote with so mild a stimulus, it is the world's loss that he did not have a heartier appetite. On a dozen Gardiner's Island oysters, a bowl of clam chowder, a peck of steamers, some bay scallops, three sauteed soft-shelled crabs, a few ears of fresh picked corn, a thin swordfish steak of generous area, a pair of lobsters, and a Long Island Duck, he might have written a masterpiece.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I take a grave view of the press. It is the weak slat under the bed of democracy

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    A. J. Liebling

    It is an anomaly that information, the one thing most necessary to our survival as choosers of our own way, should be a commodity subject to the same merchandising rules as chewing gum.

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    A. J. Liebling

    It is impossible for me to estimate how many of my early impressions of the world, correct and the opposite, came to me through newspapers. Homicide, adultery, no-hit pitching, and Balkanism were concepts that, left to my own devices, I would have encountered much later in life.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I used to be shy about ordering a steak after I had eaten a steak sandwich, but I got used to it.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Last week, I had to offer my publisher a bottle that was far too good for him simply because there was nothing between the insulting and the superlative.

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    A. J. Liebling

    My old friend looked at me with a new respect. He was discovering in me a capacity for hypocrisy that he had never credited me with before.

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    A. J. Liebling

    News is like the tilefish which appears in great schools off the Atlantic Coast some years and then vanishes, no one knows whither or for how long. Newspapers might employ these periods searching for the breeding grounds of news, but they prefer to fill up with stories about Kurdled Kurds or Calvin Coolidge, until the banks close or a Hitler marches, when they are as surprised as their readers.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Newspapers write about other newspapers with circumspection, ... about themselves with awe, and only after mature reflection.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Our hypothetical rich client might even have ordered a Pommard, because it was listed at a higher price...He would have never learned [about other wines]. A man who is rich in his adolescence is almost doomed to be a dilettante at table. This is not because all millionaires are stupid but because they are not impelled to experiment.

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    A. J. Liebling

    People everywhere confuse what they read in newspapers with news.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Southern political personalities, like sweet corn, travel badly. They lose flavor with every hundred yards away from the patch. By the time they reach New York, they are like Golden Bantam that has been trucked up from Texas - stale and unprofitable. The consumer forgets that the corn tastes different where it grows.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The country's present supply of foreign news depends largely on how best a number of dry goods merchants in New York think they can sell underwear.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The fighter (like the writer) must stand alone. If he loses he cannot call an executive conference and throw off on a vice president or the assistant sales manager. He is consequently resented by fractional characters who cannot live outside an organization.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The function of the press in society is to inform, but its role in society is to make money.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The pattern of a newspaperman's life is like the plot of 'Black Beauty.' Sometimes he finds a kind master who gives him a dry stall and an occasional bran mash in the form of a Christmas bonus, sometimes he falls into the hands of a mean owner who drives him in spite of spavins and expects him to live on potato peelings.The Sunday World was a dry-stall interlude in my wanderings.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The primary requisite for writing well about food is a good appetite.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The primary requisite for writing well about food is a good appetite. Without this, it is impossible to accumulate, within the allotted span, enough experience of eating to have anything worth setting down.

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    A. J. Liebling

    There is a healthy American newspaper tradition of not taking yourself seriously It is the story you must take that way... And if you do take yourself seriously, according to this sound convention, you are supposed to do your best not to let anyone else know about it. (Like bed-wetting.)

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    A. J. Liebling

    There is no concept more generally cherished by publishers than that of the Undeserving Poor.

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    A. J. Liebling

    The science of booby-trapping has taken a good deal of the fun out of following hot on the enemy's heels.

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    A. J. Liebling

    To the Parisians, and especially to the children, all Americans are now 'heros du cinema.' This is particularly disconcerting to sensitive war correspondents, if any, aware, as they are, that these innocent thanks belong to those American combat troops who won the beachhead and then made the breakthrough. There are few such men in Paris.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one.

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    A. J. Liebling

    I felt the satisfaction because it proved that the world is not going backward, if you can just stay young enough to remember what it was really like when you were really young.

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    A. J. Liebling

    Politics is to the conversation of Louisiana what horse racing is to England’s. In London, anybody from the Queen to a dustman will talk horses; in Louisiana, anyone from a society woman to a bellhop will talk politics. Louisiana politics is of an intensity and complexity that are matched, in my experience, only in the republic of Lebanon.