In 1949, Wolcott Gibbs of The New Yorker imagined a Peglerian tirade to a little girl asking whether there was a Santa Claus (parodying the famous "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" letter).
Joe Gibbs | May Gibbs | Herschelle Gibbs | Wolcott Gibbs | Philip Gibbs | James Gibbs | Robert Gibbs | Josiah Willard Gibbs | Joey Gibbs | Jake Gibbs | William Gibbs McAdoo | Terry Gibbs | Oliver Wolcott | Joe Gibbs Racing | Janno Gibbs | George Gibbs | Wolcott, New York | Shelley Sekula-Gibbs | Richard Gibbs | Larissa Wolcott | Lance Gibbs | Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs | Dan Gibbs | Charles Harvard Gibbs-Smith | Antony Gibbs & Sons | Alan Gibbs | Wolcott | William Francis Gibbs | Willard Gibbs Award | Vicary Gibbs (MP) |
Much of the book is devoted to anecdotes about his best-known colleagues, such as cartoonists Peter Arno, Charles Addams, and James Thurber; writers Truman Capote, John Updike, S.J. Perelman, and John O'Hara; critics Wolcott Gibbs and Robert Benchley; and editors Katherine White, Harold Ross, and William Shawn.