Review by Booklist Review
In the annals of broadcast journalism, Barbara Walters is legendary. Acclaimed for her monumental "gets," Walters interviewed a veritable who's who of twentieth-century politicians and celebrities, amassing a master class trove of spirited and probing interrogatories that famously reduced her subjects to tears. In an era when the business of broadcast news was a firmly established old boys club, Walters took a battering ram to those clubhouse doors when, in 1976, she became coanchor of ABC Nightly News. Not only was her position unprecedented, her million-dollar annual salary was record-shattering. Walters had toiled for decades in the trenches as a PR operative, low-level news writer, and participant in puff pieces on morning television; peers questioned her worthiness. Her career was forged during the days of second-wave feminism, and Walters was a highly visible target for the industry's and the nation's entrenched misogyny. Beyond the professional battles, her personal life suffered as well, through multiple marriages and a fractured relationship with her adopted daughter. Page, the Washington bureau chief for USA Today, presents an impeccably researched and deeply sourced biography and a respectful and balanced portrait of this groundbreaking icon of American journalism.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Page (Madam Speaker), the Washington Bureau chief of USA Today, presents an authoritative biography of the broadcast news legend, who died in 2022. Offering astute psychological insight into Walters, Page credits the nonstop hustle her father displayed as a booking agent with stoking his daughter's ambition but contends his frequent business failures left her with the sense that success is fleeting. Page pays careful attention to the relentless sexism Walters endured throughout her career, noting that her boss at CBS's The Morning Show hired her as a writer in 1955 because, in his words, "she had a darling ass," and that journalist Frank McGee only agreed to join Walters as cohost of NBC's Today show in 1971 under the condition that he always speak first when interviewing guests. While Page rightly lauds Walters's trailblazing accomplishments, she's clear-eyed about her subject's shortcomings, arguing that Walters sometimes asked inappropriate questions (as when she tried to out Ricky Martin as gay during a 2000 interview) and regarded women colleagues with ambivalence (Page suggests Walters was "resentful and dismissive of some of the women who followed her" and appeared to side with Donald Trump during his public spat with Walters's View cohost Rosie O'Donnell in 2008). Incisive and evenhanded, this is a triumph. Agent: Matt Latimer, Javelin Literary. (Apr.)
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Review by Library Journal Review
USA Today Washington Bureau chief Page (Madam Speaker) takes on the iconic life of journalist and television pioneer Barbara Walters (1929--2022). She dives deep into the family, culture, and society that made Walters the ambitious news anchor and producer she became. Page interviewed more than 120 of Walters's friends and colleagues, which creates an intimate insider's viewpoint--affectionate but honest. From Walters's father's life as an immigrant to her long career, the book soars and shines with intriguing story after story about such a legendary life. Page expertly portrays Walters as an important figure in society, but she also shows what made her human. VERDICT A definitive and deeply researched biography, likely to be in high demand at all libraries, especially those with book clubs. Perfect for future journalists and young people who may not know what women went through to break into careers that were traditionally unwelcoming to them.--Emily Kubincanek
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A biography of a woman of rare achievement. Page, Washington bureau chief of USA Today, biographer of Barbara Bush and Nancy Pelosi, draws on abundant sources and hundreds of interviews to create a brisk, evenhanded biography of Barbara Walters (1929-2022). Beset by an abiding sense of insecurity, Walters grew up seeing that success could swiftly turn into failure. Her father, a nightclub owner, had been "a mercurial breadwinner." When he made money, the family lived extravagantly, "but always with the risk that he might gamble it all away." Walters began her rise in TV news as a researcher and writer on NBC's Today show. Once she took her place on the air, Page writes, "she honed her ability to ask a hard question in a soft way and to make news, and her increasingly prominent profile made it easier for her to snare big names." Those big names included celebrities of all stripes; world leaders such as Fidel Castro and Yasir Arafat; and even criminals. Page breaks down the elements that made a Walters interview so successful. Getting her subject to cry was a bonus. She attained coveted positions and huge salaries, rarely acknowledging the women who went before her, "as though that might somehow diminish her own achievements." Women were competitors, rather than allies. Obsessed with her work, her personal life suffered: Three marriages failed; her adopted daughter, neglected by a mother who never was home, struggled with substance abuse. Page recounts Walters' many affairs, including with Sen. Edward Brooke and Alan Greenspan; her bitter rivalry with Diane Sawyer; and her founding of The View at the age of 67. A former president of ABC News described Walters as "hard-charging and driving and relentless and insatiable and unquenchable and indestructible"--and, as Page reveals, restless, lonely, and only fleetingly happy. A perceptive biography. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.