"ART Buchwald DOES IT AGAIN.
He died in 2007..
Buchwald was the author of thirty-three books, including the New York Times bestseller Leaving Home , a collection of political commentary, Beating around the Bush , and a memoir, Too Soon to Say Goodbye .
He received the Pulitzer Prize for outstanding commentary in 1982 and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1986.
There, Buchwald landed a job with Variety magazine and began writing his now-legendary columns, syndicated for decades in hundreds of newspapers.
After serving as a marine in the Pacific during World War II and attending the University of Southern California, he left the United States for Paris.
Buchwald is a master of the anecdote." --The Baltimore Sun About the Author: Art Buchwald was born in Mount Vernon, New York, and raised in Hollis, Queens. . . .
The book gallops and gambols along. . .
A CONSUMMATE STORYTELLER." --The New York Times Book Review "ROLLICKING . . . "HONEST AND MOVING .
Everything that has made Buchwald one of the world\'s best-loved writers is in this funny, enchanting, poignant book.
Now he remembers those golden years--when he wrote for the Paris Herald Tribune, fell in love, spoofed Hemingway, dined with gangsters, and crashed costume balls in Venice.
What\'s more, he did it.
A GREAT READ." --Larry King, USA Today In 1948, an American innocent named Art Buchwald set sail for Paris, France, determined to crash Hemingway\'s moveable feast and make himself famous. . . . "ART Buchwald DOES IT AGAIN