Publisher : Henry Luce and His American Century by Alan Brinkley (2010, Hardcover)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group
ISBN-100679414444
ISBN-139780679414445
eBay Product ID (ePID)77424343

Product Key Features

Number of Pages560 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NamePublisher : Henry LUCE and His American Century
SubjectEditors, Journalists, Publishers, Publishing, Historical
Publication Year2010
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaLanguage Arts & Disciplines, Biography & Autobiography
AuthorAlan Brinkley
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height1.7 in
Item Weight32 Oz
Item Length9.5 in
Item Width6.5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN2009-038834
Reviews"How fortunate we are . . . that Luce is now the subject of a monumental, magisterial biography, the finest ever written about an American journalist." -Jonathan Yardley,The Washington Post "Brinkley has a gift for restoring missing dimensions to figures who have been flattened into caricature . . . The book does full justice to Luce's outsider insecurity, his blind affinity for men of power and his defects as a family man. But it is a humanizing portrayal, and it credits the role his magazines, Time and Life especially, played in a country growing uneasily into the dominant geopolitical force in the world." -Bill Keller,The New York Times Book Review "Brinkley's wonderfully insightful and judicious biography is more than the story of a life; it's a political history of modernity." -Jill Lepore,The New Yorker "A finely calibrated book . . . [Brinkley] brings an even-handed synthesis and a dispassionate sense of history." -Gene Krzyzynski,Buffalo News "Alan Brinkley has done history and media buffs a tremendous service with this well-written and balanced biography of Henry Luce . . . [Brinkley] is especially effective at placing events in historical context, and rarely does his narrative bog down with too much arcane information . . . Essential reading for anyone interested in learning about modern mass communication though the prism of the life of one of its founding fathers." -Claude R. Marx,Boston Globe "The triumph of Brinkley's biography is not in a single thesis but in the disciplined, well-judged way the author presents and knits in telling fragments from the millions of words, letters, interviews, and documents . . . Ambitious, authoritative, and enjoyable." -Harold Evans,The Daily Beast "A superbly engrossing biography." -Philip Seib,The Dallas Morning News "Commanding . . . a memorable march throughTime." -Andrew Burstein, Baton RougeAdvocate "A largely sympathetic and terrifically engrossing biography." -Maureen Corrigan, npr.org "Graceful and judicious . . . Mr. Brinkley is dauntless in assessing Luce's most important accomplishments." -Janet Maslin,The New York Times "Brinkley tells of a life once well-known but now as dimly remembered asLifemagazine . . . refreshingly nonacademic." -Harry Levins,St. Louis Post Dispatch "Brinkley has told Luce's saga with scrupulous fairness, compelling detail and more than a tinge of affection for his vast ambitions and vexing frailties . . . with the rigor, honesty and generosity that Luce's own magazine's too often sacrificed to the proprietor's enormous ego and will to power." -Edward Kosner,The Wall Street Journal "A real gift . . .Brinkley has given us the enviable model of a man of his moment." -James R. Gaines,Columbia Magazine "Brinkley appears to have read every issue from the early decades of Time, Fortune, and Life cover to cover, grounding his criticisms of Luce's social and political vision in rigorous detail. He's equally solid on Luce's personal life . . . A top-notch biography, and a valuable addition to the history of American media." -Publishers Weekly(Starred review) "This brilliant and absorbing book sets Henry Luce in his true historical context. Brinkley brings Luce vividly back to life, unveils his complex marriages and gli,   "A thoroughly researched, nuanced appreciation of a complex, talented and troubled man." -Kirkus(Starred review)  "This brilliant and absorbing book sets Henry Luce in his true historical context. Brinkley brings Luce vividly back to life, unveils his complex marriages and glittering social circles and shows us how much Luce changed American society.The Publisherrecreates the seemingly now-distant moment at which traditional American media were at the peak of their power." -Michael Beschloss, author ofPresidential Courage "In this superb biography Alan Brinkley, a Columbia University historian, has told the curiously depressing story of a brilliant man who got everything wrong, including so many of the things that mattered most to him. Mr Brinkley has an eye for both the telling detail and the broad sweep of Luce's role as the man who saw the need for a national news magazine and foresaw the American century." -The Economist   "Alan Brinkley is the modern master of 'Not-so-fast.' Caricature and dinner-table gossip and received opinion never satisfy him for a moment, as this deft, vivid and admirably fair-minded portrait of the cofounder of America's most influential magazine empire makes clear. Brinkley has pinned the authentic Henry Luce to paper-gifted as well as grandiose, simultaneously vain and vulnerable, dogmatic and deeply curious, an essentially lonely man who seemed to know everyone but never found the warm companionship he craved."                                                             -Geoffrey C. Ward, author ofA First-Class Temperament   "Alan Brinkley's portrait of the remarkable Henry Luce is never less than captivating.   From Luce's childhood in China through prep school and Yale to the founding ofTIME, the battles overFORTUNEand the spectacular success ofLife(a success which proved disastrous for the first year's profit/loss statement), the narrative pulses forward, never flagging for an instant.  The analysis of the reasons why all three magazines succeeded by catching hold of the American 20th centuryzeitgeistis nothing less than extraordinary.  And Brinkley does it all without Whiggish presumptions or larding his narrative with triumphalism or condescension."     -David Nasaw, author ofThe Chief: The Life of William Randolph Hearst   "Rarely have author and subject been so ideally matched. Alan Brinkley, one of our most distinguished historians of 20th Century America, here explores the world, the mind, the magazines, the business empire and the remarkable ambition of Henry Luce, one of a tiny number of media titans who leave a palpable mark on their times. The book is paced like a thriller; it tells a story that is funny and appalling and fascinating by turns, an only-in-America account of an enormous ego at work. This is the way history should be written." -Robert G. Kaiser, author ofSo Damn Much Money: The Triumph of Lobbying and the Corrosion of American Government   "Alan Brinkley'sThe Pu
Dewey Edition22
TitleLeadingThe
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal070.5092 B
SynopsisAs the founder of Time, Life, and Fortune magazines, Henry Luce changed the way we consume the news and understand the world around us. Now acclaimed historian Alan Brinkley gives us a riveting portrait of this brilliant, complicated man who built one of the greatest media empires of the twentieth century. The son of missionaries, Luce craved both power and virtue from a young age. After he helped launch Time in 1923, he was catapulted into a world of fame, fortune, and influence, and even more so in 1936 after the spectacular beginning of Life, which would become the most popular magazine of its time. Brinkley examines Luce's prescient belief that members of the increasingly busy middle class needed a fast, reliable way to understand a world that was changing with almost unfathomable speed. He shows us how Luce reinvented the magazine industry and--along with radio and the movies--helped create the modern era as we know it. In addition, Brinkley illuminates Luce's personal life: his childhood in rural China; his years at Hotchkiss and Yale, where he met Brit Hadden, with whom he would conceive and publish Time; his tempestuous marriage to Clare Boothe Luce; and his isolated and obsessive final years. The Publisher is a great American story about the astonishing achievements and costs--both public and private--of one man's soaring ambitions.
LC Classification NumberPN4874.L76B75 2010

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