<h2><SPAN name="ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR" id="ABOUT_THE_AUTHOR"></SPAN> <!-- Page 320 --><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/320.gif" width-obs="125" height-obs="100" alt="Illustration: house" /> ABOUT THE AUTHOR</h2>
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<p>Bob Brown, after living thirty years in as many foreign
lands and enjoying countless national cheeses at the source,
returned to New York and summed them all up in this book.</p>
<p>Born in Chicago, he was graduated from Oak Park High School
and entered the University of Wisconsin at the exact moment
when a number of imported Swiss professors in this great dairy
state began teaching their students how to hole an
Emmentaler.</p>
<p>After majoring in beer and free lunch from Milwaukee to
Munich, Bob celebrated the end of Prohibition with a book
called <i>Let There Be Beer!</i> and then decided to write
another about Beer's best friend, Cheese. But first he
collaborated with his mother Cora and wife Rose on <i>The Wine
Cookbook</i>, still in print after nearly twenty-five years.
This first manual on the subject in America paced a baker's
dozen food-and-drink books, including: <i>America Cooks, 10,000
Snacks, Fish and Seafood</i> and <i>The South American
Cookbook</i>.</p>
<p>For ten years he published his own weekly magazines in Rio
de Janeiro, Mexico City and London. In the decade before that,
from 1907 to 1917, he wrote more than a thousand short stories
and serials under his full name, Robert Carlton Brown. One of
his first books, <i>What Happened to Mary</i>, became a best
seller and was the first five-reel movie. This put him in
<i>Who's Who</i> in his early twenties.</p>
<p>In 1928 he retired to write and travel. After a couple of
years spent in collecting books and bibelots throughout
<!-- Page 321 --><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321"></SPAN> the Orient, he settled down in Paris with
the expatriate group of Americans and invented the Reading
Machine for their delectation. Nancy Cunard published his
<i>Words</i> and Harry Crosby printed <i>1450-1950</i> at
the Black Sun Press, while in Cagnes-sur-Mer Bob had his own
imprint Roving Eye Press, that turned out <i>Demonics; Gems,
a Censored Anthology; Globe-gliding</i> and <i>Readies for
Bob Brown's Machine</i> with contributions by Gertrude
Stein, Ezra Pound, Kay Boyle, James T. Farrell <i>et
al.</i></p>
<p>The depression drove him back to New York, but a decade
later he returned to Brazil that had long been his home away
from home. There he wrote <i>The Amazing Amazon</i>, with his
wife Rose, making a total of thirty books bearing his name.</p>
<p>After the death of his wife and mother, Bob Brown closed
their mountain home in Petropolis, Brazil, and returned to New
York where he remarried and now lives, in the Greenwich Village
of his free-lancing youth. With him came the family's working
library in a score of trunks and boxes, that formed the basis
of a mail-order book business in which he specializes today in
food, drink and other out-of-the-way items.</p>
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<p><!-- Page 322 --><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322"></SPAN> [Compiler's Notes: Moved page on
author's other books from page 1 of project to follow
the title page.<br/>
Removed publisher's copyright information from page
3.<br/>
Removed references to Introduction, as it was omitted from
the book project.<br/>
Added A to Z links to the Appendix in the Table of
Contents]</p>
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