Starr Faithfull in New York

Although Starr Faithfull lived for only 25 years, she inspired several authors to write about her. Born January 26, 1906 in Evanston, IL, Starr died in June 1931 after a Long Island boat party.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Starr Faithfull between the Sheets

Bryn Mawr's library contains this volume:
The aspirin age, 1919-1941.
Edited and selected by Isabel Leighton
[NY: Simon & Schuster, 1949]
Contents include an essay on Starr Faithfull by Morris Markey, etc.:
--1919: The forgotten men of Versailles, by Harry Hansen.
--1920: The noble experiment of Izzie and Moe, by Herbert Asbury.
--1921: Aimee Semple McPherson; "Sunlight in my soul," by Carey McWilliams.
--1923: The timely death of President Harding, by S. H. Adams.
--1923: Konklave in Kokomo, by Robert Coughlan.
--1924: Calvin Coolidge, a study in inertia, by Irving Stone.
--1926: My fights with Jack Dempsey, by Gene Tunney.
--1927: The last days of Sacco and Vanzetti, by Phil Stong.
--1927: The Lindbergh legends by John Lardner.
--1929: The crash, and what it meant, by Thurman Arnold.
--1930: The radio priest and his flock, by Wallace Stegner.
--1931: The mysterious death of Starr Faithfull, by Morris Markey.
--1933: et cetera
- - from library.BrynMawrSchool.org/amhist_Portfolio7_2005.htm - -
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