Author picture

James Reston (1909–1995)

Author of Deadline: A Memoir

10+ Works 189 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Please distinguish the father, James Reston, also known as James B. Reston and Scotty Reston (1909-1995), from his son, James Reston, Jr. (born 1941).

Works by James Reston

Deadline: A Memoir (1991) 128 copies
Sketches in the sand (1967) 18 copies
Prelude to Victory (1942) 8 copies
Washington (1986) 6 copies
Walter Lippmann and his times (1959) — Editor — 5 copies
Report From Red China (1972) 2 copies
I mastini di Dio (2006) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Making of the President 1960 (1961) — Introduction, some editions — 1,188 copies
Earth '88: Changing Geographic Perspectives (1988) — Contributor — 13 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Reston, James Barrett
Other names
Reston, Scotty
Birthdate
1909-11-03
Date of death
1995-12-06
Gender
male
Birthplace
Clydebank, Scotland
Place of death
Washington, D.C., USA
Occupations
journalist
Relationships
Reston, James, Jr. (son)
Organizations
New York Times
Disambiguation notice
Please distinguish the father, James Reston, also known as James B. Reston and Scotty Reston (1909-1995), from his son, James Reston, Jr. (born 1941).

Members

Reviews

The point of the title is clear: Newspaper columns are ephemera, yet at their best repay rereading long after they appear. That is eminently the case with these collected columns by James B. ("Scotty") Reston. The fly-leaf begins by calling him the most influential columnist of the most influential newspaper in America, and that was not overstating the case. To a degree hard to imagine today, when anyone with an internet connection can share his or her views in the hopes someone will read them (sort of what I'm doing now), newspapers were commonly called then the Fourth Estate, a recognition of their necessary role in a thriving democracy. And the conscience of the newspaper was its columnists. And like Bond, nobody did it better than Reston.
The columns contained in this 480-page volume are sensibly arranged in thirteen thematic chapters. Those who might conclude based on Reston's land of birth and his Calvinist upbringing that the best adjective to describe him might be "dour" are advised to start with Chapter 8, Spoofs, although the chapter with the widest interest might be the final one, a collection of columns about JFK.
Reston would have never claimed that his judgments were always correct, but he knew how to think and write clearly.
I found my copy on the $2 remainder table of a D.C. bookstore in the summer of 1975. Money well-spent.
… (more)
 
Flagged
HenrySt123 | Jul 19, 2021 |
Reston started in sports writing, but moved to politics and was a firsthand observer of all presidents, cabinets, and important events from Roosevelt through the first Bush, of whom he was very critical. He has chapters on his personal life, showing a good marriage and wonderful children. There is a delightful WWII photograph of him and his wife in their journalists uniforms in England. The chapters devoted to particular men in government who he interviewed in depth are excellent.

Deadline by NYTimes journalist James Reston..memoir. Although the book is written in 1991 ...He has a good chapter on Secretary of State Achenson who he knew. He quotes Achenson as saying" We have trouble with the Arabs because they have power...from oil" Achenson recommends not relying on "fossil fuels" for electrical power, but on nuclear power. This was a new source for the world. Reston thought...writing a the end of his career in his eighties...that Achenson was the best of the 15 Sec of State he had known. This was the early 50s in Truman's administration.… (more)
 
Flagged
carterchristian1 | 1 other review | Jan 3, 2009 |
This is a very worthwhile read, especially if you're not a history major. Great perspective of 1936 -> 1970-somthing. This editor of the New York Times was mostly "stationed" in Washington DC. Personal annedotes of his relationships to many of the movers and shakers of that era.
 
Flagged
bluesviola | 1 other review | Oct 23, 2007 |

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
10
Also by
5
Members
189
Popularity
#115,306
Rating
4.0
Reviews
3
ISBNs
9
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs