In this powerful memoir, Harry Rosenfeld describes his years as an editor at the New York Herald Tribune and the Washington Post , two of the greatest American newspapers in the second half of the turbulent twentieth century. After playing key roles at the Herald Tribune as it battled fiercely for its survival, he joined the Post under the leadership of Ben Bradlee and Katharine Graham as they were building the paper's national reputation. As the Post 's Metropolitan editor, Rosenfeld managed Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein as they broke the Watergate story, overseeing the paper's standard-setting coverage that eventually earned it the Pulitzer Prize Gold Medal for Public Service. In describing his complicated relationship with Bradlee and offering an insider's perspective on the unlikely partnership of Woodward and Bernstein, Rosenfeld depicts the tensions and challenges, triumphs and setbacks that accompanied the Post 's key role in Watergate, the most potent political scandal in America's history. Rosenfeld also tells the gripping story of growing up in Hitler's Berlin. He saw his father taken away by the Gestapo in the middle of the night, and on Kristallnacht, the prelude to the Holocaust, he witnessed the burning of his synagogue and walked through streets littered with the shattered glass of Jewish businesses. After his family found refuge in America, his childhood experiences stayed with him and ultimately influenced his decision to make journalism his life's work. At a time when newspapers and other media are under financial pressure to cut back on investigative reporting, From Kristallnacht to Watergate reminds us why journalism matters, and why good journalism is essential to our democracy.
"A terrific memoir by one of the great newspapermen of the era. Harry Rosenfeld was one of the key editors on Watergate. As a reader will see here, he is probing, open-minded, dogged, and unsparing of everyone including himself. Not everyone will agree with all the details, but this is real history, illuminating and told honestly with a deep sense of the moral obligation of the press." -- Bob Woodward, coauthor of All the President's Men
"Rarely has a newspaperman's personality and experience intersected so perfectly with his time--and then been so evocatively expressed in a memoir. Harry Rosenfeld's American journey tells a great and moving tale." -- Carl Bernstein, coauthor of All the President's Men
"This is a great American story-- From Kristallnacht to Watergate , the inspiring saga of Harry Rosenfeld, arriving as a refugee and rising to the inner circle of journalists who uncovered the greatest scandal in the history of the Presidency. Harry tells it all with wit and panache, with a side order of knishes." -- Tom Brokaw
"What an American journey! Harry Rosenfeld rises from a nine-year-old Jewish refugee kid who can't speak a word of English to become a pivotal Washington Post editor in charge of the Watergate story and overseeing Woodward and Bernstein. Further, Harry is there, on the ground, reporting from Vietnam. He has been a frontline soldier in the contemporary revolution in American journalism. His story is America's story in the last half century. And he tells it with compelling readability in From Kristallnacht to Watergate ."-- Joseph E. Persico, author of Roosevelt's FDR and the Commanders He Led to Victory in World War II
The editor of the Washington Post during Watergate (played by Jack Warden in "All the President's Men") tells his life story. Born in Germany in the 1920s as part of a Jewish family his tale is a familiar one early on. He has a front row seat to Kristallnacht but fortunately his father had relatives in the US which was their ticket out. Harry acclimates to the US as a teenager quickly and fastens on newspaper work as his vocation. He cops a job with the Herald Tribune and does service in Korea during the war. But its his time at the Post as the boss of 'Woodstein' that makes this book. This is a perspective from an insider of Watergate I'd not heard before and it's page turning stuff. His battles with Simons and Bradlee are real and eventually he's pushed out. His time as editor-in-chief of an Albany newspaper is just postscript. Rosenfeld died about a month ago.
This book should have been entitled, "What Makes Harry Run?" or "People who have met Harry Rosenfeld." This is an overly detailed autobiography of Harry Rosenfeld's career as a newspaperman, first at the Herald Tribune and then at the Washington Post. Yes, he lived through tumultuous times, from his childhood in Nazi Germany, through the Koren and Vietnam Wars and the then the Watergate scandal. Harry is driven to achieve success in the newspaper industry to the detriment of his family life and health. Yet except for a brief stint in Vietnam, he was never a reporter but and editor and manager. When describing his job to Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham, he likens his role to an orchestra conductor. The book is full of name dropping and self-aggrandizing accolades. For a writer and editor, I wished Rosenfeld would have used those skills on his own autobiography.
Rosenfeld recently died, and I read his obituary in the New York Times. I found the obituary fascinating, so I decided to hunt down this book. It took a lot of doing, but I finally found it. Unfortunately, the book was awful!
A good memoir should have a thesis, be insightful, and contain a sense of drama. This was not a good memoir. Although Rosenfeld wrote clearly, the prose was workmanlike and pedestrian, and there was no drama in this book, even though Rosenfeld lived through some exciting events. This book was boring! I slogged through it and skimmed much of it.
This an amazing book. It really explained the idea of the American dream from the perspective of a very young child. He went through Kristallnacht and then dealt with Watergate as one of the editors of the Washington Post. And the best part is that my neighbors know him, so I might get to meet him.