Poisoning the press : Richard Nixon, Jack Anderson, and the rise of Washington's scandal culture / Mark Feldstein.
2010
E856 .F45 2010 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
Items
Details
Title
Poisoning the press : Richard Nixon, Jack Anderson, and the rise of Washington's scandal culture / Mark Feldstein.
Author
Edition
1st ed.
ISBN
9780374235307
0374235309
0374235309
Publication Details
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010.
Language
English
Description
x, 461 p., [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 24 cm.
Call Number
E856 .F45 2010
Dewey Decimal Classification
973.924092
Summary
It is March 1972, and the Nixon White House wants Jack Anderson dead. The syndicated columnist Jack Anderson, the most famous and feared investigative reporter in the nation, has exposed yet another of the President's dirty secrets. Nixon's operatives are ordered to "stop Anderson at all costs", permanently. Across the street from the White House, they huddle in a hotel basement to conspire. Should they try "Aspirin Roulette" and break into Anderson's home to plant a poisoned pill in one of his medicine bottles? Could they smear LSD on the journalist's steering wheel, so that he would absorb it through his skin, lose control of his car, and crash? Or stage a routine-looking mugging, making Anderson appear to be one more fatal victim of Washington's notorious street crime? This book recounts not only the disturbing story of an unprecedented White House conspiracy to assassinate a journalist, but also the larger tale of the bitter quarter-century battle between the postwar era's most embattled politician and its most reviled newsman. The struggle between Nixon and Anderson included bribery, blackmail, forgery, spying, and burglary as well as the White House murder plot. Their vendetta symbolized and accelerated the growing conflict between the government and the press, a clash that would long outlive both men. The author traces the arc of this confrontation between a vindictive president and a flamboyant, crusading muckraker who rifled through garbage and swiped classified papers in pursuit of his prey, stoking the paranoia in Nixon that would ultimately lead to his ruin. The White House plot to poison Anderson, the author argues, is a metaphor for the poisoned political atmosphere that would follow, and the toxic sensationalism that contaminates contemporary media discourse. Melding history and biography, the book unearths significant new information from more than two hundred interviews and thousands of declassified documents and tapes. This is a chronicle of political intrigue and the true price of power for politicians and journalists alike. The result, Washington's modern scandal culture, was Richard Nixon's ultimate revenge.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
pt. I. Beginnings. The Quaker and the Mormon
pt. II. Rise to power. Washington whirl
Bugging and burglary
Comeback
pt. III. Power. The president and the columnist
Revenge
Vietnam
The Anderson papers
Sex, spies, blackmail
Cat and mouse
Brothers
"Destroy this"
From burlesque to grotesque
"Kill him"
Watergate
Disgrace
pt. IV. Endings. Final years
Epilogue.
pt. II. Rise to power. Washington whirl
Bugging and burglary
Comeback
pt. III. Power. The president and the columnist
Revenge
Vietnam
The Anderson papers
Sex, spies, blackmail
Cat and mouse
Brothers
"Destroy this"
From burlesque to grotesque
"Kill him"
Watergate
Disgrace
pt. IV. Endings. Final years
Epilogue.