Born in
Hamilton, Ohio, Liebman graduated from the
University of Cincinnati when he was 19 years old. He went on to be ordained and also earned a doctorate in Hebrew letters from
Hebrew Union College. From 1934 to 1939, Liebman served as rabbi of
K.A.M. Temple in
Chicago, Illinois. A sermon Liebman gave at Temple Israel, titled "The Road to Inner Serenity", was published as a pamphlet by one of his friends, bookstore owner Richard Fuller, who passed it on to publisher
Richard L. Simon of
Simon & Schuster. Simon & Schuster then arranged to publish Liebman's
self-help book titled
Peace of Mind, issued in 1946, which sought to reconcile
religion and
psychiatry. Liebman had himself previously undergone
psychoanalysis. Reaching #1 on the
New York Times nonfiction best-sellers list on October 27, 1946,
Peace of Mind held the top position on the list for a total of 58 (non-consecutive) weeks, and spent more than three straight years on the list. In September 1947, the rabbi and his wife Fan took in a teenager, Leila Bornstein, a Polish-born survivor of the
Auschwitz concentration camp. Leila's parents and two younger sisters perished in the camp. The rabbi and his wife had been childless for the past 19 years and would later adopt Leila. A brief article on the family was featured in
The Ladies' Home Journal in January 1948. While
Peace of Mind was still on the best-sellers list, Liebman died at age 41 on June 9, 1948. Liebman's death was attributed to a "heart attack" with one obituary reporting that he had a heart attack following a severe case of influenza. He is buried in the
Temple Israel Cemetery in
Wakefield, Massachusetts. ==References==