Printer's Devil to Publisher
Adolph S. Ochs of The New York Times
Doris Faber
Published as part of the Times's centennial
celebration, and written by a former Times reporter, Printer's Devil tells
the dramatic and little-known story of how a struggling young man from
Tennessee bought the nearly bankrupt New York Times in 1896 and transformed
it into the best and most powerful newspaper in the world. A lively, readable
biography of a barefoot boy who rose through the ranks of the newspaper
business--from printer's errand boy, to printer, to publisher of a small
Tennesee daily, to a position of enormous power and influence, competing
with the likes of Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst, and consorting
with presidents. With an introduction by Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, current
chairman of The New York Times and grandson of Adolph Ochs.
192 pp, Paper, $12.95 ISBN: 1-883789-09-5
16 pp, 94 illustrations, 9 maps
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