The Voice of America: Lowell Thomas and the Invention of 20th-Century Journalism

ST MARTINS

$24.31 - $41.90
(No reviews yet) Write a Review
UPC:
9781137279828
Maximum Purchase:
3 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
2017-06-20
Release Date:
2017-06-20
Author:
Mitchell Stephens
Language:
english
Edition:
1st
Adding to cart… The item has been added

**WINNER, Sperber Prize 2018, for the best biography of a journalist**

The first and definitive biography of an audacious adventurerthe most famous journalist of his timewho more than anyone invented contemporary journalism.

Tom Brokaw says: Lowell Thomas so deserves this lively account of his legendary life. He was a man for all seasons.

Mitchell Stephenss The Voice of America is a first-rate and much-needed biography of the great Lowell Thomas. Nobody can properly understand broadcast journalism without reading Stephenss riveting account of this larger-than-life globetrotting radio legend. Douglas Brinkley, Professor of History at Rice University and author of Cronkite

Few Americans today recognize his name, but Lowell Thomas was as well known in his time as any American journalist ever has been. Raised in a Colorado gold-rush town, Thomas covered crimes and scandals for local then Chicago newspapers. He began lecturing on Alaska, after spending eight days in Alaska. Then he assigned himself to report on World War I and returned with an exclusive: the story of Lawrence of Arabia.

In 1930, Lowell Thomas began delivering Americas initial radio newscast. His was the trusted voice that kept Americans abreast of world events in turbulent decades his face familiar, too, as the narrator of the most popular newsreels. His contemporaries were also dazzled by his life. In a prime-time special after Thomas died in 1981, Walter Cronkite said that Thomas had crammed a couple of centuries worth of living into his eighty-nine years. Thomas delighted in entering forbidden countriesTibet, for example, where he met the teenaged Dalai Lama. The Explorers Club has named its building, its awards, and its annual dinner after him.

Journalists in the last decades of the twentieth centuryincluding Cronkite and Tom Brokawacknowledged a profound debt to Thomas. Though they may not know it, journalists today too are following a path he blazed. In The Voice of America, Mitchell Stephens offers a hugely entertaining, sometimes critical portrait of this larger than life figure.