My Times: A Memoir of Dissent
By (Author) John Hess
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
Seven Stories Press,U.S.
1st August 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Autobiography: business and industry
070.92
Paperback
288
Width 1mm, Height 1mm
327g
In the critical look at the New York Times from the inside, 24-year-veteran editor, foreign correspondent and investigative reporter John Hess offers his take on some of the most influential people in journalism of the last fifty years, including Cyrus Sulzberger, A.M. Rosenthal, Seymour Hersh, David Halverstam, Scotty Reston, Max Frankel, Anthony Lewis, Hodding Carter, Homer Bigart and more. He offers shocking revelations of truths intentionally buried alongside his own affectionate account of various campaigns for justice which found a home in the paper's pages.
[Hess's] remembrances should be required reading for journalism students, as he covers such topics as the importance of presenting a balanced view, how qualified a reporter must be in order to write about a subject, protecting sources, using press credentials and more. 'News is, after all, what the public does not know,' he writes. This memoir, while imparting information, is at once authoritative and engaging, and deserves a place alongside books by Gelb and otherTimesluminaries. Publishers Weekly
John Hess's memoirs provide a rare, lively, highly informative picture of the internal workings of the world's most eminent and important newspaper, as it fills the space between advertisements that 'is charmingly known in the trade as the news hole,' so I learned. His rich and varied experience over many years also brings to life a good part of modern history, from a perspective that is hard to match. Noam Chomsky
I've always admired John Hess for his bone-deep honesty as a journalist. Somehow, I learned more of backstreets from him than I did of boulevards. Even when it came to covering dining, he could detect the hype from the true flavor. Studs Terkel
For most of his adult life John hess was an imperfect fear, even a monkey wrench, in the mighty crowd-control engine known asThe New York Times. Kurt Vonnegut
JOHN HESS is a veteran newspaperman and the author of Vanishing France, The Case for De Gaulle, The Grand Acquisitors, and, with his wife Karen, Taste of America. After leaving the Times Hess worked in television and radio journalism, wrote a nationally syndicated column, and freelanced for The Nation and Grand Street. Today he continues his role as media watchdog with a daily spot on WBAI's Pacifica, New York public radio. He is the holder of the Ordre National de Mrite and is the winner of the Meyer Berger Award of the Columbia School of Journalism.