Smart Set Year 1914 Magazine Back Issues
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- The Parasite By George Bronson-Howard
- A Complete Novel Of Broadway Life
- The Night Romance Of Paris By George Jean Nathan
- The Merchant Of Venus By Albert Payaon Terhune
- One Day More, The Only Play Ever Written By Joseph Conrad
- Nobody Ever Met Her
- The Romance Of A Disappointed Girl By Barry Benefield
- John Adams Thayer Corporation
- The Defective
- The Weed's Counsel
- The Whirpool.. Novelette
- A Broken Lute
- Clean-Crisp-Clever
- This Magazine Will Entertain, Amuse, Thrill, Surprise-But Will Never Offend Good Taste.
- Take It Home- And Enjoy
- Max Beerbohm In A Whimsical And Characteristic Essay And Other Good Things By
- The Greatest Living Anglo-Saxon Dramatist
- Arthur Wing Pinero
- Contributes To This Issue A Remarkable One-Act Play
- Among Other Out-Of-The Ordinary Features
- A Magazine Of Cleverness
- The Bridge Game
- And How I Beat It To A Finish
- By Owen Hatteras
- A Miniature library Of The Summer's Best Reading
- Ten Short Stories - A Novelette - A One Act Play
- An Essay - Fifteen Poems-literary And Dramatic Reviews
- All Keen -All Clever-All Crisp
- The Latest Work Of Fiction Of W. L. George
- The Twenty-Three Days Of Nazimov
- Author Of The Great Success
- A Bed Of Roses
- A Great Sensational Story Of The Present War
- How American Brains Vanquished Chaos And Compelled Peace.
- By Don Byrne
- A Magazine Of Cleverness
- Each Feature Complete In This Issue
- One Civilized Reader
- Is Worth A Thousand Boneheads
- A Magazine Of Cleverness
- Beware Of Cheap Imitations Of The Smart Set
- No Stories Of The Eternal Triangle!
- Nothing Less Than A Quadrangle!!
- A Magazine Of Cleverness
- The Blue Sphere By Theodore Dreiser
- The Woman Who Lost By Helen Woljeska
- In Hell With The Dramatists By Randolph Bartlett
- Aunt Herisson By Eugene Brieux
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The Smart Set was an American monthly literary magazine, founded by Colonel William d'Alton Mann and published from March 1900 to June 1930. Its headquarters was in New York City. During its Jazz Age heyday under the editorship of H. L. Mencken and George Jean Nathan, The Smart Set offered many up-and-coming authors their start and gave them access to a relatively large audience.
Following a dispute with owner Eltinge Warner over an unprinted article mocking the national grief over President Warren G. Harding's death, Mencken and Nathan departed the publication to create The American Mercury in 1924. After their departure, Warner sold the publication to press mogul William Randolph Hearst. Although circulation increased under Hearst's ownership, the magazine's content declined in quality. Following the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the magazine failed to survive the economic slump and ceased publication in June 1930.
Half a decade after its dissolution, critic Louis Kronenberger hailed The Smart Set in The New York Times Book Review as one of the greatest literary publications due to its influence over American culture during its brief existence. "You were very conscious that it was making literary history," Kronenberger wrote, "it was teaching a literary America that went about on all fours how to walk."