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Russell Baker is a former columnist and correspondent for The New York Times and The Baltimore Sun. His books include The Good Times, Growing Up, and Looking Back. »
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Looking Back
From his youthful days as a delivery boy for William Randolph Hearst's Baltimore newspapers through his many years as a journalist and commentator, Russell Baker has been a keen observer of American politics and culture. Now, in these eleven essays, all originally published in The New York Review of Books, he looks back on a group of iconic public figures from his own past.
Here are presidentsLyndon Johnson feuding with Robert F. Kennedy, and Richard Nixon in his grasping, spectral exile. Here are would-be presidentsEugene V. Debs and Barry Goldwater, "gentlemen fallen among brutes," and Hearst himself. Here too are those who set their sights on something besides the presidency: Martin Luther King, Joe DiMaggio, and the disputatious memoirists of The New Yorker's glory days.
Undeluded by the roar of what he calls "our national engines of ballyhoo, bushwah, and baloney," Russell Baker reflects on the strange fascination that these larger-than-life characters have held for the American imagination. With an elegiac yet shrewd sense of their accomplishments both enduring and ephemeral, he traces the impressions they left on twentieth-century Americaand on him.
Reviews
Baker wrote wonderfully, with perfect, witty sentences that could make you
stop and read them again.
The Boston Globe
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Format: Hardcover
Retail Price: $19.95
Price: $15.96 (20% off)
May 1, 2002
208 pages
ISBN: 1590170083 9781590170083
NYRB Collections
Essays & Criticism
History
Politics & Current Affairs
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