Live at the Algonquin: Interview by Susan Tepper with Donna Baier Stein

“The Algonquin Round Table, also called The Round Table, was an informal group of American literary men and women who met daily for lunch on weekdays at a large round table in the Algonquin Hotel in New York City during the 1920s and ’30s. The Algonquin Round Table began meeting in 1919, and within a few years its participants included many of the best-known writers, journalists, and artists in New York City. Among them were Dorothy Parker, Alexander Woollcott, Heywood Broun, Robert Benchley, Robert Sherwood, George S. Kaufman, Franklin P. Adams, Marc Connelly, Harold Ross, Harpo Marx, and Russell Crouse. The Round Table became celebrated in the 1920s for its members’ lively, witty conversation and urbane sophistication. Its members gradually went their separate ways, however, and the last meeting of the Round Table took place in 1943.” (Britannica.com) 

Writer Susan Tepper interviews Donna Baier Stein in this legendary literary stomping grounds.

Previous
Previous

Review in Publishers Weekly/BookLife: The Silver Baron's Wife

Next
Next

Publisher’s Weekly Book Review: The Silver Baron’s Wife