The Paris Herald

The Paris Herald
Автор книги: id книги: 2044633     Оценка: 0.0     Голосов: 0     Отзывы, комментарии: 0 1786,98 руб.     (17,83$) Читать книгу Купить и скачать книгу Купить бумажную книгу Электронная книга Жанр: Современная зарубежная литература Правообладатель и/или издательство: Ingram Дата добавления в каталог КнигаЛит: ISBN: 9781935212317 Скачать фрагмент в формате   fb2   fb2.zip Возрастное ограничение: 0+ Оглавление Отрывок из книги

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Описание книги

Any American traveling in the world today will come across the Paris Herald somewhere, though it now goes under the name the International New York Times. Never mind, at heart it is still the Paris Herald and traces its roots to Paris at the beginning of the 20th Century when it was as familiar in the kiosks of the Left Bank and the Champs Elysées as the latest article in l’Aurore by Zola or newest installment by Proust in his never ending search for lost time.The Paris Herald, narrative historical fiction, tells the story of the world’s most famous newspaper, focusing on the key years of the 1960s, when the fates of the newspaper and of the regime of Charles de Gaulle became curiously intertwined.The story centers on intrigue and rivalry among the New York Herald Tribune, New York Times and Washington Post. When the Herald Tribune ceased operations in New York in 1966, the Times, which had started its own European Edition in 1960, expected the Paris Herald to close, too, giving the Times victory in Paris as well as New York. But Herald Tribuneowner Jock Whitney wouldn’t sell to the Times, preferring to join with Katharine Graham, who’d taken charge at the Post after her husband’s death.Within months, the Times came, hat-in-hand, offering to close its European edition and asking to buy into the new Herald/Post partnership. The Times neither forgave nor forgot its humiliation.The Paris Herald is the story of many people: of Frank Draper, who fought in the Lincoln Brigade; Byron Hallsberg, who joined the Hungarian uprising; Dennis Klein, researching the Nazi occupation of Paris; Suzy de Granville, searching for family roots; Wayne Murray, escaping homophobia; of Steve and Molly Fleming, living the high life; Sonny Stein and Al Lodge and Connie Marshall and Ben Swart and Eddie Jones, paperboy, all finding themselves at the Paris Herald for their own reasons and ending up in the fight to keep the newspaper alive.The 1960s was a tumultuous decade. The conflict in America over race and the Vietnam War spread to Europe, setting off terrorism, riots and revolt across the continent and threatening already shaky regimes. Nowhere was the risk of collapse greater than in France, where the revolt of 1968 nearly toppled the government and led to the resignation of President Charles de Gaulle the following year. Throughout those difficult times, the Paris Herald was at the center of eventsSince being founded in 1887 by James Gordon Bennett, Jr., the Paris Herald has been essential to American expatriate life in Europe. In France, many Americans put down roots, married into French families and became permanent expatriates, in some cases exiles, like Bennett himself. The tense events of the 1960s touched the lives of every American in Paris, including many well-known artistic exiles: James Baldwin, Art Buchwald, William Saroyan, James Jones, Bud Powell, Dexter Gordon, Kenny Clarke, Joe Turner, Memphis Slim.As the crisis deepened, one shadowy man became the link between de Gaulle and the troika of newspaper owners, Whitney, Graham and Arthur Ochs Sulzberger. This man, Henri de Saint-Gaudens, a high French official in the Elysée Palace, understood the Herald’s historical importance to Paris.The Paris Herald, a novel, is riveting historical drama, as relevant today as yesterday. It is a story never before told.

Оглавление

James Oliver Goldsborough. The Paris Herald

Contents

AUTHOR’S NOTE

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POSTSCRIPT

Отрывок из книги

To James Chace and Buddy Weiss,

two good teachers.

.....

All these people, even the ones with exotic names, were Americans. Suzy de Granville was from Altoona, Draper from New York, Hallsberg from Indiana, Gretchen Kilic from Chicago, LePoint from Virginia. The only non-American among the editors was Marder, who was from Toronto. The only Brits were the proofreaders, who worked downstairs next to the composing room. The compositors and press-men were all French, members of the CGT, the Communist labor union. They too congregated in the Berri Bar between editions. The various groups were joined each night by a crush of distributors and vendors arriving in every imaginable kind of vehicle in a cacophony of honking and shouting in the street, to pick up first editions as they came off the presses.

The ground floor office, which handled ads and subscriptions during the day, was taken over by sorters after 10:30, mostly young women who according to Klein worked at night selling more intimate wares down around les Halles, on the rue St.-Denis. “St. Denis,” he said, “my patron saint, the patron saint of all Jews. Ha-ha.”

.....

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