From Kirkus Reviews:
Strong biography of talented, complex, influential journalist John Gunther (1901-70). Gunther's best-selling Inside books (beginning in 1936) were, explains Canadian freelance-writer Cuthbertson, the product of a full and sophisticated life that began in Chicago and was sharpened at that city's university. Gunther began as a fiction writer and early acquired an international point of view that allowed him to regard US phenomena with rare objectivity. Fast-track from the start, Gunther is revealed here as a man at home with world leaders, not easily controlled (though Cuthbertson notes that Gunther, unlike most journalists, shared information with the US government--and thereby gained special access to other information). Handsome and extroverted, Gunther spent the 30's in Europe watching the buildup to WW II. Living in London, Paris, Vienna, and St. Moritz, he covered stories from Moscow and Vienna to Syria and Turkey, and not only met the right people (William L. Shirer, Trotsky, H.G. Wells, Rebecca West, Maxim Gorky, etc.) but had their respect, often their friendship. Here, though, Cuthbertson never loses sight of the earthy Midwest realist. Gunther dealt in the basics. He was a formidable interviewer and got people to say things they hadn't planned on. His subject was power--who had it, what was being done with it, where it was headed. Sometimes he'd confront it, as when he wrote the first US expos‚ of Hitler, getting himself placed on a Gestapo death-list. Gunther was a powerful writer, a precursor of post-50's journalism, with a big, oracular style. In staid 1947, he described America as ``the greatest, craziest, most dangerous, least stable, most spectacular, least grown-up and most powerful nation ever known.'' A bighearted book about a big man, and an excellent antidote for those who feel shortchanged by today's journalism. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
John Gunther (1901-1970) wanted to be a great novelist, but instead is remembered for his bestselling Inside series ( Inside Europe ; Inside U.S.A. ). The legwork and care that he devoted to his reportage are meticulously described in this well-paced, sympathetic, diligently researched biography by Canadian reporter Cuthbertson. Despite a successful career as a journalist and an enviably eventful life spent traveling, Gunther endured the deaths of his infant daughter and his 17-year-old son (whom he memorialized in Death Be Not Proud ). Charming, gregarious and popular with women, he entered into many liaisons which ended his first marriage, to Frances Powell Fineman; Cuthbertson presents their marital difficulties from Gunther's point of view. The biographer is more objective about his subject's writing, acknowledging that Gunther, although painstaking in his pursuit, could not always overcome his biases. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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