The Telephone Booth Indian

The Telephone Booth Indian
Author: Abbott Joseph Liebling
Publisher: Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Doran, Incorporated
Total Pages: 290
Release: 1942
Genre: Businessmen
ISBN:

The Telephone Booth Indian

The Telephone Booth Indian
Author: A.J. Liebling
Publisher: Crown
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2008-12-10
Genre: True Crime
ISBN: 0307480666

A classic work on Broadway sharpers, grifters, and con men by the late, great New Yorker journalist A. J. Liebling. Often referred to as “Liebling lowlife pieces,” the essays in The Telephone Booth Indian boisterously celebrate raffishness. A. J. Liebling appreciated a good scam and knew how to cultivate the scammers. Telephone Booth Indians (entrepreneurs so impecunious that they conduct business from telephone booths in the lobbies of New York City office buildings) and a host of other petty nomads of Broadway—with names like Marty the Clutch and Count de Pennies—are the protagonists in this incomparable Liebling work. In The Telephone Booth Indian, Liebling proves just why he was the go-to man on New York lowlife and con culture; this is the master at the top of his form, uncovering scam after scam and writing about them with the wit and charisma that established him as one of the greatest journalists of his generation and one of New York’s finest cultural chroniclers.

Phone Booth

Phone Booth
Author: Ariana Kelly
Publisher: A & C Black
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2015-08
Genre: Social interaction
ISBN: 9781628924107

An archeological object without conservationists, the phone booth exists as a memory to those over thirty-and as a strange, curious, and dysfunctional occupier of public space for those under thirty. This book approaches the phone booth as an entity that, in its myriad manifestations in different parts of the world, embodies a cluster of attitudes concerning privacy, freedom, power, sanctuary, and communication. Playing off of varied surfaces-literature, film, personal narrative, philosophy, and religion-Phone Booth looks at the place of an object on the cusp of obsolescence.

The Lonely Phonebooth

The Lonely Phonebooth
Author: Peter Ackerman
Publisher: David R. Godine Publisher
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2010
Genre: Cell phones
ISBN: 156792414X

When cellular telephones arrive on the scene, a once-popular Manhattan phonebooth becomes shabby and lonely until a power outage reminds everyone of how useful it can be.

Tel-talk

Tel-talk
Author: Paola Poletto
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Telephone booths
ISBN: 9781926639499

In this anthology, a talented group of writers create site-specific installations or short fictions that include a phone call, either metaphorical or real, in homage to and out of respect for the beautiful, dirty telephone booth. Nothing conveys the end of an era quite like the lowly phone booth--resonant of forgotten technologies, extinct social patterns, and an egalitarian time when telecommunications were easily accessible to anyone with pocket change. Perfect for anyone interested in the commonalities shared with technology and communication, this book explores the bygone era of phone-booth culture.

Just Enough Liebling

Just Enough Liebling
Author: A. J. Liebling
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 564
Release: 2005-10-05
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780865477278

The restaurants of the Latin Quarter and the city rooms of midtown Manhattan the beachhead of Normandy and the boxing gyms of Times Square the trackside haunts of bookmakers and the shadowy redoubts of Southern politicians--these are the places that A.J. Liebling shows to us in his unforgettable New Yorker articles, brought together here so that a new generation of readers might discover Liebling as if for the first time. Born a hundred years ago, Abbott Joseph "Joe" Liebling was the first of the great New Yorker writers, a colorful and tireless figure who helped set the magazine's urbane style. Today, he is best known as a celebrant of the "sweet science" of boxing or as a "feeder" who ravishes the reader with his descriptions of food and wine. But as David Remnick, a Liebling devotee, suggests in his fond and insightful introduction, Liebling was a writer bounded only by his intelligence, taste, and ardor for life. Like his nemesis William Randolph Hearst, he changed the rules of modern journalism, banishing the distinctions between reporting and storytelling, between news and art. Whatever his role, Liebling is a most companionable figure, and to read the pieces in this grand and generous book is to be swept along on a thrilling adventure in a world of confidence men, rogues, press barons and political cronies, with an inimitable writer as one's guide.