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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Harold_LoebHarold Loeb - Wikipedia

    Harold Albert Loeb (October 18, 1891 – January 20, 1974) was an American writer, notable as an important American figure in the arts among expatriates in Paris in the 1920s. In 1921 he was the founding editor of Broom, an international literary and art magazine, which was first published in New York City before he moved the venture to Europe.

  2. May 12, 2016 · Another expat who made the cut: the 34-year-old writer Harold Loeb, the product of Princeton (where he boxed and wrestled) and two of New York’s wealthiest and most prominent Jewish families.

    • Lesley M. M. Blume
  3. Jul 20, 2018 · The great author, who would have turned 119 this weekend, used and abused his Jewish friend Harold Loeb. Why did Loeb take it? by. Dan Grossman. July 20, 2018.

  4. Jun 4, 2016 · The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record. The true story of Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises is told in Lesley Blume's book, Everybody Behaves Badly. She talks to ...

  5. Sep 2, 2016 · Harold Loeb was one of the real-life models for the character Bill Gorton in Hemingway's 1926 novel. Learn how he met Hemingway in Paris, joined him in Pamplona, and inspired the bullfight scenes in the book.

    • Don Noble
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  7. Jan 23, 1974 · Harold A. Loeb, publisher of an influential avant‐garde literary magazine in the early nineteen‐twenties and a onetime crony of Ernest Hemingway and other American expatriates, died Sunday in...

  8. Ernest Hemingway (far left), Harold Loeb, Lady Duff Twysden, Hadley Richardson (Hemingway's first wife), Donald Ogden Stewart, and Pat Guthrie. Pamplona, Spain, circa 1925.

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