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Paperback Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power Book

ISBN: 006079870X

ISBN13: 9780060798703

Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power

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Book Overview

In nineteenth-century industrial America, while Carnegie provided the steel, Rockefeller the oil, Morgan the money, and Vanderbilt the railroads, Pulitzer ushered in the modern mass media.

James McGrath Morris chronicles the epic story of Joseph Pulitzer, a Jewish Hungarian immigrant who amassed great wealth and extraordinary power during his remarkable rise through American politics and journalism. Based on years of research and newly discovered...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An ImPRESSive Work

In the style of Ron Chernow and Jeane Strouse, James McGrath Morris has provided a robust and sterling account of one of the most important, yet very complicated giants in American history. In the hands of this sublime biographer the tale of Hungarian-born Joseph Pulitzer leaps in grand fashion from each page as we follow Pulitzer across the Atlantic in 1864 and then are whisked through a life that saw its fair share of triumphs and tragedies. While most people know of the award that bears his name, readers will find on these pages that Pulitzer was more than a newspaperman turned mogul, a man driven with ambition to whatever endeavor or cause he pursued. Utilizing sources never before mined Morris literally fleshes out the life of Pulitzer not only within the context of his times but with a nuanced and balanced portrait of Pulitzer the mortal, a man who could easily turn on the charm, win your trust, but could also be a nefarious liar. Chronicling his ascent to power and fame in the arena of nascent modern journalism readers will no doubt have mixed emotions as Puiltzer descends into severe neurosis and lonliness, making his life all the more tragic. A must read, PULITZER: A LIFE IN POLITICS, PRINT, AND POWER, belongs alongside the recent monumental biographies that have been penned about the pantheon of greats including J.P. Morgan, Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, and Cornelius Vanderbilt.

Pull-it-Sir Prize

Since I read and liked Morris' last book about the Rose Man of Sing Sing, I thought I'd give this one a try. Good news: this is one of those smooth-reading BIG bios. Pulitzer's life is not what I expected... the prizes given out in his name annually have indeed scrubbed the family moniker clean. The real Pulitzer could be vindictive, petty, grandiose, funny... relentless and irascible also come to mind. As you slip into the book and move past the childhood in Hungary, the United States after the Civil War--the politicians, the dealmakers, the press--all start to envelope you... and you follow this gangly quirky ambitious man on his adventures. He changed journalism for better and for worse. His newspapers were read; his fortune was made but he was frequently loathed and ridiculed. Morris researched hard, right down to finding a fellow with a cigar box full of Pulitzer business receipts, and down to unearthing long-suppressed love letters by Pulitzer's wife to another man.

Larger than Life

A tangle between two goliaths: one self-made, visibly neurotic, an up from the street immigrant with an inbred sense of the injustice of society -- the other a scion of power, overbred for greatness, with an ego the size of the great outdoors and a self-righteous champion of Right against Wrong...this is the backdrop of the titantic rivalry between the Progressive era's two great reformers, Democrat Joseph Pulitizer and the accidental Republican President Teddy Roosevelt, that sets the stage for Jamie McGrath Morris' vibrant biography, Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power. Morris' biography is rich with the dichotomies of the late 19th and early 20th century: How the name of a purveyor of Yellow Journalism in his lifetime could come to epitomize in posterity the highest public standard of objective reporting and freedom of the press. The era itself is one of the turning points in American history, as the nation, goaded by relentless headlines of Pulitzer's World and TR's extraordinary Presidency, managed to beat back the Trusts, build the Panama Canal, and lay for foundation for the irrigation of America's far west. Morris' Pulitzer is a great read, filled with passion and a big stage--a wonderful biography of one the most curious, unlikely shapers of American history.

Pulitzer Matters, More Than You Know

Joseph Pulitzer's story is a classic American rags-to-riches-to-sellout saga. A Jewish immigrant from Hungary, Pulitzer made his way in the rough-and-tumble newspaper business of Missouri after the Civil War. Allying his newspapers with the "little man" against the big shots, Pulitzer invented the irreverent, aggressive, sensational daily press of America at the turn of the Twentieth Century. Becoming fabulously wealthy himself, Pulitzer abandoned his allegiance to the little man and his newspapers ossified. Suffering blindness from two detached retinas, Pulitzer descended into eccentricities, depression, and a sharp alienation from his family. James McGrath Morris tells this exciting and cautionary story with great judgment and wit. At a time when our own media seem to have lost their way -- gutless broadcast news, shrinking print media, immature Internet vehicles -- the time is ripe for someone to refashion how we learn about the world, and how we think about it, the way Pulitzer did. It's a terrific book -- read it.

An essential new biography

This is the first major life of Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911) since W. A. Swanberg's 1967 biography, but it's far more than merely an updated portrait. Its two-fold achievement is to restore a giant figure in the history of American journalism, business, and politics--a man who's been half-lost to modern memory apart from the prize that he created and that bears his name--and to report, for the first time, the whole truth about several fascinating episodes and key facets of Pulitzer's life. It's a stunning, at times mind-blowing biography that wears its heroic research and enterprising detective work lightly. In its late 19th/early 20th century heyday, Pulitzer's New York World had the combined national clout and prestige of the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post rolled into one. With today's newspaper industry enduring a profound crisis of confidence and authority in the face of economic crisis and a new-media onslaught, this is an ideal moment to revisit the story of the man who, more than any other, created modern journalism, and became the first fantastically wealthy, world-spanning press lord. Given the brisk pacing, swift narrative momentum, and often-thrilling drama of this biography, it's impossible not to think of the movies while reading Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power. Thanks in large part to Orson Welles' Citizen Kane, we're much more familiar with the story of William Randolph Hearst, Pulitzer's upstart rival, than we are with Pulitzer. But in James McGrath Morris's telling, Welles might as well have based his great film on Pulitzer. It has the same outlines of a young man's meteoric rise--Pulitzer was a Hungarian Jew who arrived in America penniless and friendless--and of a crusading idealist's gradual transformation into a bitter, isolated, self-pitying plutocrat. (Once a rags-to-riches champion of social justice and the poor, Pulitzer later mercilessly crushed a strike called by impoverished street-urchin newsboys.) But just when you begin to recoil from the contemptible figure Pulitzer has become, this biography unfolds the riveting story of the clash between Pulitzer's World, which reported on alleged corruption in the building of the Panama Canal, and an enraged President Theodore Roosevelt, who unleashed the full legal might of the federal government in an attempt to convict and imprison Pulitzer for criminal libel. It's like a Gilded-Age version of All the President's Men, except the commander-in-chief is relentlessly stalking the journalists instead of the other way around. Amazingly, this crucial episode in the history of the First Amendment, freedom of the press, and abuse of presidential power has never been fully told, but James McGrath Morris (who resorted to the threat of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit to uncover government records that had been hidden for a century) gives us the complete blow-by-blow story. Lastly, I couldn't help recalling The Aviator and the strange life o
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