No Ordinary Joe: A Life of Joseph Pulitzer III

Awards:   Winner of Missouri History Book Award (History) 2006
Author:   Daniel W. Pfaff
Publisher:   University of Missouri Press
ISBN:  

9780826216076


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   01 December 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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No Ordinary Joe: A Life of Joseph Pulitzer III


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Awards

  • Winner of Missouri History Book Award (History) 2006

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Daniel W. Pfaff
Publisher:   University of Missouri Press
Imprint:   University of Missouri Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.768kg
ISBN:  

9780826216076


ISBN 10:   0826216072
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   01 December 2005
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Stock Indefinitely
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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Reviews

In this superbly crafted biography Pfaff successfully rescues Joseph Pulitzer III, scion of the legendary publishing dynasty, from relative obscurity. In addition to providing fascinating insights about members of the illustrious Pulitzer clan and the family dynamics that shaped them, Pfaff constructs a narrative that allows his readers to venture into the world they inhabited. - William E. Foley, author of Wilderness Journey: The Life of William Clark


Pfaff (Joseph Pulitzer II and the Post-Dispatch, 1991) paints a beauty-marks-and-all portrait of the least consequential Pulitzer. Even as he began his 31-year reign as editor/publisher of the staunchly liberal St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Joseph Pulitzer III confronted a media landscape vastly different from the one dominated by his father and even more famous grandfather. Through his financial strategies, diversification into television and cautious stewardship, he managed to keep his family's empire intact. Otherwise, it's difficult to see how anything other than his last name, connoting as it does the very best (the Prize) and the very worst (the yellow) in journalism, recommends him for inclusion in the discussion of great newspapermen. Born to privilege, educated at all the right schools (St. Marks, Harvard), at home in the usual playgrounds of the wealthy (Paris, Zermatt, Bar Harbor), Pulitzer appears to have resignedly entered the family business. Left to his own inclinations, it's likely his knowledge of and passion for art-even as a youth he had a discerning eye, and his wealth enabled him to become an early collector of Picasso, Klee, Mondrian and other modern masters-might have led to a more genuinely accomplished, if more modest, career. Pfaff (Emeritus, Journalism/Penn State Univ.) attempts to persuade us that Pulitzer was other than the ordinarily competent, self-absorbed, aloof, humorless fellow who emerges here, but the author relies principally on interview subjects who owe their lives, fortune, career or portions of their soul to Joe III. Almost completely devoid of the common touch, a not unimportant quality in a newspaperman, he reached his 60s before experiencing the novelty of a bus ride. Charming. The mini-portraits of the paper's four managing and four editorial-page editors constitute the book's strongest section. Only followers of the fortunes of 20th-century media companies or the most devoted students of journalism will warm to Joe himself. (Kirkus Reviews)


In this superbly crafted biography Pfaff successfully rescues Joseph Pulitzer III, scion of the legendary publishing dynasty, from relative obscurity. In addition to providing fascinating insights about members of the illustrious Pulitzer clan and the family dynamics that shaped them, Pfaff constructs a narrative that allows his readers to venture into the world they inhabited. - William E. Foley, author of Wilderness Journey: The Life of William Clark


Author Information

DANIEL W. PFAFF is Professor Emeritus of Journalism at Penn State University. Author of Joseph Pulitzer II and the Post-Dispatch: A Newspaperman's Life, he lives in State College, Pennsylvania.

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