
Ring Lardner (born Ringgold Wilmer Lardner) (March 6, 1885 – September 25, 1933) was an American writer. He is most well known for his short stories.1
Works
- Zanzibar: A Comic Opera in Two Acts (1903)
- In Allah’s Garden (1913)
- March 6th, 1914. The Home-Coming of Chas. A Comiskey, John J. McGraw, and James J. Callahan (1914)
- Bib Ballads (1915)
- You Know Me Al – A Busher’s Letters (1916)
- Gullible’s Travels, Etc. (1917)
- Treat ‘Em Rough (1918)
- My Four Weeks in France (1918)
- The Real Dope (1919)
- Regular Fellows I Have Met (1919)
- Own Your Own Home (1919)
- Young Immigrunts (1920)
- Symptoms of Being 35 (1921)
- The Big Town (1921)
- Say It With Oil / Say It With Bricks (1923)
- How to Write Short Stories- With Samples (1924)
- What Of It? (1925)
- Charles Scribner’s Sons Present Ring W Lardner In The Golden Honeymoon And Haircut (1926)
- The Story of a Wonder Man, Being the Autobiography of Ring Lardner (1927)
- Round Up: The Stories of Ring W. Lardner (1929)
- Stop Me — If You’ve Heard This One (1929)
- June Moon (1929)
- First And Last (1934)
- Shut Up, He Explained (1962)
- Ring Around Max: The Correspondence of Ring Lardner and Max Perkins (1973)
- Letters from Ring (1979)
- Ring Lardner’s You Know Me Al: The Comic Strip Adventures of Jack Keefe (1979)
- Ring Around The Bases: The Complete Baseball Stories Of Ring Lardner (1992)
- Letters of Ring Lardner (1995)
- The Annotated Baseball Stories of Ring W. Lardner, 1914-1919 (1995)
- The Lost Journalism of Ring Lardner (2017)
See also
External Links
- Ring Lardner papers at The Newberry Library
- Chicago Literary Hall of Fame profile
- Goodreads profile
- IMDb profile
- Indiana Journalism Hall of the Fame profile
- Works on Faded Page
- Works on LibriVox
- Works on Project Gutenberg
- Ring Lardner on Find A Grave
References
1. “Ring Lardner.” Encyclopedia Britannica. Accessed September 18, 2020.