W.H. Auden famously stated, "Poetry makes nothing happen," contrasting it with journalism's impactful role. In a compelling blend of memoir and critique, Lance Morrow reflects on his 40 years at TIME magazine, revisiting the Age of Typewriters and the 20th century's remarkable figures—statesmen, dictators, heroes, and the journalists who chronicled their actions. He explores how journalism has influenced the past century, shaping history and often altering its course. Morrow discusses Walter Duranty, the New York Times correspondent whose Pulitzer Prize-winning articles lauded Stalin during a time of mass starvation in Ukraine, resulting in millions of deaths. In contrast, he examines John Hersey's Hiroshima, revered as one of the greatest journalistic works. Morrow delves into the moral complexities of Hersey's reporting, first published in 1946. This work is also a personal reflection, as Morrow is the son of two journalists who covered Roosevelt and Truman. He recounts his early days as a typist alongside Carl Bernstein at the now-defunct Washington Star and acknowledges the influence of his friend and editor Walter Isaacson, who introduced him to computers at TIME. The narrative includes vivid profiles of iconic figures in journalism, capturing a golden age that waned with the rise of television and digital media.
Lance Morrow Knihy





God and Mammon
- 168 stránek
- 6 hodin čtení
This book is about the partnership of God and Mammon in the New World--- about how Americans have made money and lost money, and about how they have thought about that obsessive and peculiarly American subject. Money is the basic American thing, the life's blood of the country. God and Mamon shows how the dynamics of money in its many dimensions (material, spiritual, cultural, psychological) worked to make America what it is. It traces the grand American binaries of Success and Failure to their theological origins in Calvinism's anxieties about Salvation and Damnation.
Safari. Experiencing the wild
- 164 stránek
- 6 hodin čtení
Photographs of elephants, giraffes, wildebeasts, monkeys, birds, and lions are accompanied by written impressions of the African wilderness