From the Pulitzer Prize-winning, best-selling author and preeminent investigative journalist of our time, a heartfelt, hugely revealing memoir of a career breaking some of the most significant stories of the last half-century.
Seymour M. Hersh has been a staff writer for The New Yorker and The New York Times. He established himself at the forefront of investigative journalism in 1970 when he was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his expose of the massacre in My Lai, Vietnam. Since then he has received the George Polk Award five times, the National Magazine Award for Public Interest twice, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the George Orwell Award, and dozens of other awards.
One of America's greatest investigative reporters. * New York Times
Magazine *
In a city and culture where screeching talk shows and preening
columnists have largely supplanted old-fashioned shoe-leather
reporting, and most 'investigative reporting' consists of the
collection of carefully dispensed leaks, Hersh stands virtually
alone. -- Rupert Cornwell * The Independent *
The most feared investigative reporter in Washington. * Guardian
*
If there is a smoking gun lying around the White House, the
reporter most likely to find it is Seymour M. Hersh. -- Scott
Sherman * Columbia Journalism Review *
A whip-smart, preternaturally energetic outsider who . . .
assembled a body of work that helps to radically revise the way
Americans see their government. -- Bob Thomson * The Washington
Post *
A groundbreaking journalist who has revealed some of America's
darkest secrets. -- David Jackson * The Chicago Tribune *
The last great American reporter. * Financial Times *
Hersh's exposes of gross abuses by members of the US military in
Vietnam and Iraq have earned him worldwide fame and high
journalistic honors. * Foreign Policy *
Quite simply, the greatest investigative journalist of his era. --
David Remnick, Editor-in-Chief * New Yorker *
Hersh is necessary reading for anyone remotely interested in what
went wrong and continues to go wrong in Iraq -- Praise for CHAIN OF
COMMAND * The New York Times *
I've long admired the skill and independence with which Hersh has
brought important and concealed information to light -- Ahmed
Rashid, Praise for THE KILLING OF OSAMA BIN LADEN * New York Review
of Books *
One of the most skilled investigative journalists in American
history shares his saga in compelling detail ... Hersh takes
readers behind the scenes as he exposes corrupt U.S. foreign
policy, Defense Department bumbling in numerous wars, political
coverups during Watergate, private sector corporate scandals, and
torture tactics used by the U.S. government against alleged
terrorists after 9/11. The author shares insightful (and sometimes
searing) anecdotes about fellow journalists, presidents and their
cronies, military generals, and numerous celebrities. Readers
interested in a primer about investigative techniques will find
Hersh a generous teacher. Candor is the driving force in
this outstanding book. Rarely has a journalist's memoir come
together so well, with admirable measures of self-deprecation,
transparent pride, readable prose style, and honesty. * Starred
Kirkus Review *
Powerful . . . There's gripping journalistic intrigue aplenty as
[Hersh] susses out sources and documents, fences with officials,
and fields death threats. . . . Hersh himself is brash and direct,
but never cynical, and his memoir is as riveting as the great
journalistic exposes he produced. * Publishers Weekly *
Candid and revelatory . . . Compared to the contemporary field of
blogs, bots, and opinion-driven reportage, the last half of the
twentieth-century can look like the heyday of honest and critical
journalism. But even now, Hersh remains at the vanguard of
tenacious and purposeful writers who speak truth to power, and
surely he's inspiring the best at work now. Journalism junkies will
devour this insider's account of a distinguished career. * Booklist
*
Reporter is just wonderful. Truly a great life, and what
shines out of the book, amid the low cunning and tireless legwork,
is Hersh's warmth and humanity. Essential reading for every
journalist and aspiring journalist the world over -- John le Carre
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