Alistair Cooke

Alistair Cooke

סופר


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On a fateful day in 1964, Alistair Cooke was dragged into Van Cortland Park in New York City to play his first game of golf. He was immediately hooked, and golf became his greatest passion, even though he called it Òa method of self-torture, disguised as a game.Ó No one has written more brilliantly or more lovingly about golf than he does here. GOLF gathers together for the first time the best of CookeÕs pieces on what he called Òthe marvelous maniaÓ and showcases the incomparable wit and mischievous charm that made Cooke one of the greatest journalists and broadcasters of the twentieth century. Watch as he describes Arnold Palmer playing in 102-degree heat in San Antonio, dapper Gary Player winning the U.S. Open at Creve Coeur, Missouri, and Jack Nicklaus playingÑand winningÑalmost everywhere....

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In nearly three thousand BBC broadcasts over fifty-eight years, Alistair Cooke reported on America, illuminating our country for a global audience. He was one of the most widely read and widely heard chroniclers of America—the Twentieth Century’s de Tocqueville. Cooke died in 2004, but shortly before he passed away a long-forgotten manuscript resurfaced in a closet in his New York apartment. It was a travelogue of America during the early days of World War II that had sat there for sixty years. Published to stellar reviews in 2006, though “somewhat past deadline,” Cooke’s The American Home Front is a “valentine to his adopted country by someone who loved it as well as anyone and knew it better than most” (The Plain Dealer [Cleveland]). It is a unique artifact and a historical gem, “an unexpected and welcome discover in a time capsule.” (Washington Post) A portrait frozen in time, the book offers a charming look at the war through small towns, big cities, and the American landscape as they once were. The American Home Front is also a brilliant piece of reportage, a historical gem that “affirms Cooke’s enduring place as a great twentieth-century reporter” (American Heritage).
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For nearly sixty years, Alistair Cooke reported on American life. Now, to coincide with what would be his 100th birthday, the Overlook Press is proud to publish Reporting America, which collects Cooke's coverage of the most momentous half-century in American history.

Compiling his most striking and significant essays and "letters," Reporting America is one of the more important and compelling accounts of modern America to be put to paper. A naturalized U.S. citizen originally hailing from Britain, Cooke had his finger on the pulse of America from World War II up to modern times. His beloved broadcast, Letter from America, saw 11 presidents in office, four wars, and an incredible shift in American culture and life. He adored the U.S. as only a naturalized citizen could, and his reports were incisive and often moving. Reading Cooke's reporting gives new life to the crucial moments in our history and culture he sought to capture and share with the world.

Reporting America also features an introduction by Cooke's daughter, Susan Cooke Kittredge, in which she provides an intimate memoir of her father, as well as commentary throughout the book on her father's legacy. Kittredge's memories offer a rare insight into the personal life of the man who many knew only as the voice of Letter from America and the host of CBS's Omnibus and PBS's Masterpiece Theatre....


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