book data
144 ratings,
3.31
average rating, 78 reviews
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published
July 29th 2008
by Knopf
binding
Hardcover, 352 pages
isbn
0307267520
(isbn13: 9780307267528)
description
A keenly intelligent, delightfully mordant novel that blends fact and fiction with the same deft hand that was at work in John Darnton’s best-selling
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 262)
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5 stars (7)
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4 stars (60)
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avg 3.31
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
02/05/09
Bookmarks Magazine
added it
Reviewers for the nation's major newspapers clearly loved this comic romp through their own stomping grounds. Anyone in the habit of reading the New York Times will have no trouble recognizing a few of the book's characters, and reporters and editors will probably share a great deal of the author's gallows humor. After all, Darnton did spend 40 years as a reporter, editor, and foreign correspondent for the New York Times, and Black & White is a tribute to an earlier era of reporting. A few criti
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Read in March, 2009
Loved this book. You will enjoy this fast-paced thriller too, moreso if you’ve worked in a newsroom, and especially if you remember copyboys, composing rooms, and clipping morgues (which I do, though I was a pup). The reporter is the hero (naturally) in this plot, which revolves around a newspaper that is an obvious send-up of the New York Times. (The author is a veteran Times correspondent.) Darnton knows how to both keep things moving and drop in key clues for the alert reader. The action is...more
This is a very good book. It centers around the the New York Globe. The newspaper is plummeting and readers are becoming fewer and fewer. All of the a sudden the disliked editor in chief is found dead. Jude Hurly is assigned to the story unfolding in their own news room. Jude teams up with Det. Priscilla Bollingsworth to find the killer. Along the way their are numerous plot turns and more employees turn up dead. The book leaves you with no idea about who could have killed them and when I finall...more
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Read in January, 2009
recommends it for:
All my newspaper friends.
As a journalist, I was really looking forward to reading this book. One of the editors is killed in the newsroom and then we get to watch the reporters and police figure out who did it.
I liked that the story is set in present-day journalism. It includes the newspaper's Web site and comments about the industry's struggles.
The book has a lot of characters, who I sometimes had trouble keeping straight. The characters were interesting, though.
I did enjoy the va...more
I liked that the story is set in present-day journalism. It includes the newspaper's Web site and comments about the industry's struggles.
The book has a lot of characters, who I sometimes had trouble keeping straight. The characters were interesting, though.
I did enjoy the va...more
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Read in January, 2009
My husband and i used to wonder why his editors at the new york times were always so mean and crabby. After reading this who-dunnit, we understand. This book is a murder mystery, ostensibly, but it's really a very detailed portrait of daily life at the world's most prestigious newspaper — which is losing more and more prestige and readership by the minute.It shows the incredible big dog eating little dog daily life there, the fear and loathing of the newsroom. But it also describes in an inspi...more
Read in January, 2009
A witty, fun inside scoop of a book on the newspaper world, reminiscent of Front Page and His Girl Friday. Darnton is more interested in seeing how many different and quirky characters he can come up with than in developing any of them in great depth, but the read is worth it for the grittiness and fun of seeing the newspaper world and the exploration of the place of the newspaper in an internet world. A beach book, an airplane book, a book to listen to while running.
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Read in December, 2008
AS a mystery, ok, not so much. The plot is a bit unfinished, and doesn't really hold together all that well (and the murderer makes no sense).
As a roman a clef about the New York Times, definitely amusing. While some of the pseudonyms are obvious (Jimmy Pomegranate? Come on.) it's definitely fun to try to guess who he's talking about and wonder how accurate the description is.
As a roman a clef about the New York Times, definitely amusing. While some of the pseudonyms are obvious (Jimmy Pomegranate? Come on.) it's definitely fun to try to guess who he's talking about and wonder how accurate the description is.
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Read in July, 2009
The beginning is interesting but I am having trouble connecting with the characters...lots of information on the inner workings of a newspaper and interesting views of where news media should go...on line, stay in print, etc. This is not a book to read in brief moments while waiting for kids...better to sit by the pool and stay with it to follow the story line.
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Read in September, 2008
This is a solid, fun book. It held my interest throughout. I must say, Darnton must be quite intelligent to put this book together, with all the characters, and how they fit together for the protaganist reporter and his peers who work to solve the crimes at his newspaper. Although I know certain things must have been oversimplified about the running of a newspaper, I liked the fact that this book filled in a few blanks for me about how such a place operates. I also appreciated that the book take...more
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Read in February, 2009
A quick read, and a good one, although the writer's newspaper background is pretty obvious from the style. But that really works for the detail of the setting in funny stories about the modern day newspaper biz. Kinda have to wonder how the higher-ups at the NY Times felt about their opposite numbers in this novel.
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It started out good, was slow in the middle, and had a pretty good ending. It was a little different having the main character as a reporter for a newspaper. The frustrating part was there are so many characters that it's really too many to keep track of. It's hard to figure out who is important and who isn't.
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An adult murder mystery. Several people are ending up dead at a newspaper. The journalist covering the stories is searching for clues. You don't know whodunit until the last 1/3 of the book, so it keeps you guessing but there really aren't any clues to follow till further in. A pretty good mystery.
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Read in September, 2008
Hee, hee. This was a fun read, good characters, fun plot line. All in all a good whodunit. Not too transparently obvious in most places. I never suspected the murderer but I also didn't swallow the bait on the red herrings.
The other fun part of the book was the walk down memory lane of when newspapers were king. It had interesting details about the industry.
It's also a "smart book", by which I mean if you're smart you'll pick up on the references to worl...more
The other fun part of the book was the walk down memory lane of when newspapers were king. It had interesting details about the industry.
It's also a "smart book", by which I mean if you're smart you'll pick up on the references to worl...more
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Read in December, 2008
I didn't do right by this book, reading it in 15 minute bursts as I dropped off to sleep. It was a lot funnier than I was able to properly appreciate since I was half asleep through too much of it, coming to as the book crashed down - again - on my nose. Fun newspaper stuff!
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Read in January, 2009
This book struggled between trying to be a noirish mystery and a contemporary commentary on the decline of journalism. As a journalist, it was somewhat entertaining to read about a serial killer loose in the newsroom and I have to admit the denouement was a hoot.
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Read in January, 2009
recommends it for:
newspaper people
It's a pretty good read, entirely focused on New York City, specifically, cops and newspapers. The characters in this murder mystery are very thinly disguised, by name and description, though I thought "Jimmy Pomegranate" as a lofty NYT writer based in DC was a little too silly. The Drudge, Murdoch, Siegal and other references are amusing.
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Read in January, 2009
Set at a fictional version of the Gray Lady, this mystery keeps readers guessing -- and laughing -- till the end. Highly enjoyable, eminently readable.
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Read in September, 2008
hilarious. I don't know the Times people parodied well enough to get every nuance, but he has the characters and foibles of the newspaper business nailed.
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Read in January, 2009
Dumb. A very fine journalist who fails miserably at fiction. Cardboard characters, embarrassing plot, clumsily written. I gave up after eighty pages. Peeee-Yew!!!
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Read in April, 2009
A book that starts out with a great premise--a murder mystery set in a newsroom--brings only mediocre results. The peek into the frantic operations of a newspaper was very interesting, but the mystery itself was never compelling, and the author spent too much time trying to satirize the characters.
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