Kenneth Stockton was a man of letters and correspondingly poor. He was the literary editor of a leading metropolitan daily; but this job only netted him fifty dollars a week and he was lucky to get that much.
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
American writer Christopher Darlington Morley founded the Saturday Review, from 1924 to 1940 edited it, and prolifically, most notably authored popular novels.
Christopher Morley, a journalist, essayist, and poet, also produced on stage for a few years and gave college lectures.
Shandygaff contains a mixture of editorials and fictional essays about the early years and authors of the 20th century. Full of humor and now obsolete language, Morley's tales of personal adventures and discussions of authors and journalists of whom I'd not yet heard kept me fascinated. The only reason I'd give it a 3 instead of 4 is due to my absolute adoration of his first and second novels, Parnassus on Wheels and The Haunted Bookshop, with which this cannot compare.
Morley’s books have everything I hope to find in a book: they’re informative but amusing, deeply literate, and written in a style that can be effortlessly austere and elegant, only to segue into a torrential cascade of side-splitting verbal virtuosity.