Veteran nonfiction author Beard (Blue Blood and Mutiny) presents a celebratory biography of Roy W. Howard (1883–1964), the ambitious journalist, demanding editor, and colorful “mastermind” behind the early 20th-century rise of the Scripps-Howard news empire. He accesses decades of diaries and personal correspondence to tell the story of Howard’s ascent from a short-statured Midwestern cub reporter to the dominant cohead of what would become one of the largest and most influential U.S. newspaper conglomerates, all before he was 40 years old. An abundance of detail—historical, professional, and personal—gives the book an impressive credibility that will fascinate many readers, despite the facts alternately tending to weigh down the pace of some of the livelier chapters and anecdotes. Still, this volume succeeds overall in paying homage to Howard’s influence on modern news: fast breaking, in-depth, and delivered with everyday people in mind. VERDICT This well-researched investigation into the life of a news baron is recommended for fans and students of the history of the newspaper industry.
For much of the twentieth century Roy Howard was one of the nation’s dominant media barons. In Newsmaker, Patricia Beard shows why Howard and the Scripps Howard media empire mattered, and how their work shaped America. It’s a detailed, entertaining read straight out of The Front Page.
Roy Howard is one of the most remarkable journalism leaders of the twentieth century. He lived the life of three people. For years I have believed that Howard’s story was worthy of a book, or several. Patricia Beard has taken on the challenge and written an extraordinary biography.
Roy Howard was a key player in the golden age of newspaper journalism. From the early twentieth century into the nineteen sixties, his creativity, energy and passion fueled a major newspaper chain, Scripps-Howard, an international news syndicate, United Press, and his own news-making interviews with notables, including Hitler and Stalin in the same week of 1936. He was a confidant of every president from Hoover and FDR to Eisenhower. Newsmaker captures Howard’s flair for living, his innovative accomplishments and his impact on his times.
Roy Howard was one of the most influential newspaper men of the twentieth century. At twenty-five he became general manager of what was then United Press and by thirty-nine he was chairman of the newly renamed Scripps-Howard news empire. He was central to the reporting of two world wars, the Depression, and the creation of the American century. Patricia Beard’s Newsmaker draws on a treasure trove of personal papers to create the full picture of a man who by dint of will and determination helped create a world of journalism that lasted decades. Journalism is always evolving and much can be learned from Beard’s lively and illuminating description of a man who was at the center of global events.
Veteran nonfiction author Beard (Blue Blood and Mutiny) presents a celebratory biography of Roy W. Howard (1883–1964), the ambitious journalist, demanding editor, and colorful “mastermind” behind the early 20th-century rise of the Scripps-Howard news empire. He accesses decades of diaries and personal correspondence to tell the story of Howard’s ascent from a short-statured Midwestern cub reporter to the dominant cohead of what would become one of the largest and most influential U.S. newspaper conglomerates, all before he was 40 years old. An abundance of detailhistorical, professional, and personalgives the book an impressive credibility that will fascinate many readers, despite the facts alternately tending to weigh down the pace of some of the livelier chapters and anecdotes. Still, this volume succeeds overall in paying homage to Howard’s influence on modern news: fast breaking, in-depth, and delivered with everyday people in mind. VERDICT This well-researched investigation into the life of a news baron is recommended for fans and students of the history of the newspaper industry.
05/01/2016
Veteran nonfiction author Beard (Blue Blood and Mutiny) presents a celebratory biography of Roy W. Howard (1883–1964), the ambitious journalist, demanding editor, and colorful "mastermind" behind the early 20th-century rise of the Scripps-Howard news empire. He accesses decades of diaries and personal correspondence to tell the story of Howard's ascent from a short-statured Midwestern cub reporter to the dominant cohead of what would become one of the largest and most influential U.S. newspaper conglomerates, all before he was 40 years old. An abundance of detail—historical, professional, and personal—gives the book an impressive credibility that will fascinate many readers, despite the facts alternately tending to weigh down the pace of some of the livelier chapters and anecdotes. Still, this volume succeeds overall in paying homage to Howard's influence on modern news: fast breaking, in-depth, and delivered with everyday people in mind. VERDICT This well-researched investigation into the life of a news baron is recommended for fans and students of the history of the newspaper industry.—Robin Chin Roemer, Univ. of Washington Lib., Seattle
2016-02-09
The peripatetic life of a newspaper mogul. When Roy Wilson Howard (1883-1964), director of the huge Scripps-Howard publishing company, celebrated his 50th anniversary as a newsman, he was lauded by the Cincinnati Times-Star as "a phenomenon of his generation—a born reporter and a top-flight executive, who has never forgotten that the reporter is the core of any newspaper." Having risen from cub reporter to publisher on par with William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer, he "was the ultimate example of the American success story." Drawing on extensive family archives, Beard (A Certain Summer, 2013, etc.) offers a richly detailed portrait of the man and his times. Howard was energetic and determined but also arrogant, vain, impatient, and exacting. "You are unduly opinionated and intolerant," he once admonished himself. "Cultivate a greater respect for the ideas and opinions of others even when these run counter to your own." Early in his career, as president of United Press, Howard extended its reach worldwide, serving nearly 800 papers, with 48,000 wires daily. His prowess made him an internationally prominent figure within news circles and beyond, and that importance was significantly enhanced by his position in the Scripps-Howard organization. He found easy access to politicians, among them, Herbert Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, John F. Kennedy, and Dwight Eisenhower. An indefatigable traveler, Howard was given audiences by world leaders, as well: in 1936, he gained an interview with Hitler, who gave "nothing of the impression of a nut"; shortly afterward, he was in Moscow, shaking hands with Stalin. In 1939, in London, Howard met with Anthony Eden, lunched with Winston Churchill, and stopped at the American Embassy to see Joseph Kennedy. He lunched with Dag Hammarskjöld and was friendly with Francisco Franco and Chiang Kai-shek and his wife. He also had a good eye for staff, hiring top-notch editors and reporters, such as Ernie Pyle, but he never relinquished his need to control his vast corporation. A lively history of one man's indelible imprint on American news.