First printing. Very good tight copy, unread, Very good shiny jacket. In this first political thriller by the Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist, an investigative reporter traces the shocking secret funding behind an attempt to buy up all of America's media. Fiction.
This is a very readable piece of writing. It discusses the important topic of foreign interference in media for the purpose of influencing public opinion. It also is an authoritative perspective on the world of journalism and media of the time by a world-class reporter.
I think the plot is a bit overextended, the characters sometimes take a film noir caricature, but maybe that was how life was in the 1980s for executives. The ending was pleasant but not as powerful as the plot unraveling. The writing was smooth and the whole story reasonably plausible.