By: John Norris
The First Queen of Journalism
Genre: Non-Fiction Biography
Viking
October 1, 2015
On Sale: September 22, 2015
Featuring:
340 pages
ISBN: 0698407822
EAN: 9780698407824
Kindle: B00TY3ZOF0
Hardcover / e-Book
Book Summary
A wildly entertaining biography of the trailblazing
Washington columnist and the first woman to win the Pulitzer
Prize for commentary
Before there was
Maureen Dowd or Gail Collins or Molly Ivins, there was Mary
McGrory. She was a trailblazing columnist who achieved
national syndication and reported from the front lines of
American politics for five decades. From her first
assignment reporting on the Army–McCarthy hearings to her
Pulitzer-winning coverage of Watergate and controversial
observations of President Bush after September 11, McGrory
humanized the players on the great national stage while
establishing herself as a uniquely influential voice. Behind
the scenes she flirted, drank, cajoled, and jousted with the
most important figures in American life, breaking all the
rules in the journalism textbook. Her writing was admired
and feared by such notables as Lyndon Johnson (who also
tried to seduce her) and her friend Bobby Kennedy who
observed, “Mary is so gentle—until she gets behind a
typewriter.” Her soirees, filled with Supreme Court
justices, senators, interns, and copy boys alike, were
legendary.
As
the red-hot center of the Beltway in a time when the
newsrooms were dominated by men, McGrory makes for a
powerfully engrossing subject. Laced with juicy gossip and
McGrory’s own acerbic wit, John Norris’s colorful biography
reads like an insider’s view of latter-day American
history—and one of its most enduring characters.