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Chasing History

A Kid in the Newsroom

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Chasing History

Written by: Carl Bernstein
Narrated by: Carl Bernstein, Robert Petkoff
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About this listen

The digital version of this audiobook contains an introduction read by Carl Bernstein.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning coauthor of All the President’s Men - the chronicle of the investigative report about the Watergate break-in and resultant political scandal that led to President Richard Nixon’s resignation - recalls his formative years as a teenage newspaper reporter in JFK’s Washington - a tale of adventures, scrapes, clever escapes, and the opportunity of a lifetime.

“Carl Bernstein, Washington Star.”

With these words, the 16-year-old senior at Montgomery Blair High School set himself apart from the high school crowd and set himself on a track that would define his life. Carl Bernstein was far from the best student in his class - in fact, he was in danger of not graduating at all - but he had a talent for writing, a burning desire to know things that other people didn’t, and a flair for being in the right place at the right time. Those qualities got him inside the newsroom at the Washington Star, the afternoon paper in the nation’s capital, in the summer of 1960, a pivotal time for America, for Washington, DC, and for a young man in a hurry on the cusp of adulthood.

Chasing History opens up the world of the early 1960s as Bernstein experienced it, chasing after grisly crimes with the paper’s police reporter, gathering colorful details at a John F. Kennedy campaign rally, running afoul of union rules, and confronting racial tensions as the civil rights movement gained strength. We learn alongside him as he comes to understand the life of a newspaperman, and we share his pride as he hunts down information, gets his first byline, and discovers that he has a talent for the job after all.

By turns exhilarating, funny, tense, and poignant, Chasing History shows us a country coming into its own maturity along with young Carl Bernstein, and when he strikes out on his own after five years at the Star, his hard-won knowledge and experience feels like ours as well.

A Macmillan Audio production from Henry Holt and Company

"Narrator Robert Petkoff, with an occasional assist from the author, takes listeners back to the beginning. Sounding like an indulgent grandfather telling his life story to his grandchildren, Petkoff recounts how a scrappy high schooler managed to worm his way into the Washington Star newsroom at age 16.... This audiobook will provide hope to any would-be journalist." (AudioFile)

©2022 by Essential Reporting Enterprises, Inc. (P)2021 Macmillan Audio
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Great Read!!

This was a fascinating read and gives you a bird’s eye view of the making of a newsman. Starting as a copy boy at The Washington Star at the tender age of 16, Bernstein gives us a glimpse inside the world of those who educated, mentored, supported and, at times, frustrated him on the road to becoming a world-renowned Journalist. It ends when he moves from The Star to a New Jersey community paper and then, finally, to The Washington Post. It’s an inspiration to those of us who struggled with school – especially the subjects that didn’t interest us. Working in a profession which required a degree for entry-level positions, Carl spent more time working in the trenches then sitting in lecture halls and, it was his failure to get his degree that thwarted his advancement at The Star. He does, however, give enormous credit to his time at The Star and all those who gave him the best education a Newsman could have. Hope there’s a Volume II in the works ‘cause he left us hanging in the ‘mid 60s!!

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  • Overall
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Great book on the history of newspapers

The narrator was great, however growing up with Carl Bernstein, I would have loved to have had him read the book.

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Do you like good journalism? Do you still read newspapers?

I followed the Watergate hearings in its entirety, and wanted to know more about Carl Bernstein. In Audible format this memoir is like reliving the events of those years. Told plainly in his journalistic matter-of-fact way, Bernstein relates how he made his career choice. Primarily deals with his first six years in journalism, but with an epilogue that sums up the later years, and the lives of those who mentored Bernstein and many he worked with.

The main reader, Robert Petkoff, has a perfect voice for this memoir with the right cadence and emphasis.

Much more than how great newspapers and reporters work—it is about men and women, many behind the scenes, who love their jobs. Reading/listening Chasing History one has to acknowledge the honesty and integrity that is part of good journalism. No “fake news” here!

I hope there will be a sequel that explains more about the “All the President’s Men.

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