Jimmy Breslin The man who told the truth

Richard Esposito

Book - 2024

"Jimmy Breslin: The Man Who Told the Truth is the first biography of the legendary writer, vividly portrayed by Richard Esposito, a former colleague of the Big Man. From Breslin's humble beginnings as a copy boy, to winning the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary, the writer's life was as fascinating as any of his subjects. With the full cooperation of Breslin's family and interviews with countless of his former coworkers, friends, and enemies, Esposito has crafted a meticulous and revealing portrait of a complex man who bared his soul to the world in column inches"--

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070.92/Breslin
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2nd Floor New Shelf 070.92/Breslin (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 25, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Crime Ink [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Richard Esposito (author)
Edition
First Crime Ink edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
417 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781613165775
  • Cast of characters
  • Prologue
  • Sam
  • Sam speaks
  • Sam's letter to Breslin
  • Sam sleeps
  • Sam writes
  • Becoming Jimmy Breslin
  • Breslin becomes a big shot
  • More than one I in Tribune
  • The new journalism, & the old mob
  • The first plane to Dallas
  • You! You! You! You!
  • The bard of Queens Boulevard
  • Riots, race & the one percent
  • Bobby We'll never be young again
  • Post haste
  • Bumpy's farewell
  • Lindsay in Harlem
  • Feat of clay
  • How to write a profile
  • Running against the machine
  • Crimes of a century
  • The night John Lennon died
  • Dies the victim dies the city
  • Lufthansa heist
  • Dies Rosemary dies the family
  • Fear city
  • Simply stunning
  • Boulevard of broken schemes
  • A prize named for a publisher
  • Truth, justice & the comics
  • Bring back the death penalty
  • "One great act of bigotry"
  • Love, betrayal & loss
  • You never leave whitespace
  • He finds Selma in Zuccotti Park
  • Big Man dies
  • Coda
  • A timeline of significant events
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This admiring biography from journalist Esposito (Bomb Squad) chronicles the career of pugnacious and prolific New York City reporter Jimmy Breslin (1928--2017). Esposito contends that Breslin deserves to be remembered alongside his New York Herald Tribune colleague Tom Wolfe as a progenitor of "New Journalism," citing among other examples Breslin's decision to focus his coverage of John F. Kennedy's funeral on how the man who dug the president's grave experienced that day. Also detailed are Breslin's unsuccessful 1969 bid for City Council president on a platform promising to make the city a state; the taunting letters the Son of Sam wrote Breslin in the mid 1970s; and Breslin's forceful condemnations of Donald Trump for taking out a newspaper ad calling for the execution of the Central Park Five in 1989. Esposito presents Breslin as a consummate reporter--asserting that "he usually used more shoe leather and worked as hard as or harder... than any reporter whose front-page beat was the cops, courts, jails"--and the crisp prose conjures the smoke-filled newsrooms of the industry's mid-century heyday ("Rat-tat-tatting and slamming--powerful, fast, heavy-fingered key strikes--sweating, smoking, crumpling pages into balls that cluttered the desk and dropped on to the floor"). It's a loving ode to a dedicated journalist and the bygone era in which he made his mark. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lively portrait of the legendary New York crime reporter and columnist. In this expansive, laudatory biography of the celebrated and often controversial journalist (1928-2017), Esposito, himself a veteran print and TV reporter as well as Breslin's former newspaper colleague, meticulously chronicles his coverage of major events that shaped New York City. The book begins with Breslin's reporting on the Son of Sam murders in 1977, including the exclusive letter he received from the killer, which exemplified his knack for being at the center of major stories. It also established his celebrity status: "With Son of Sam, Breslin knew he was ready to become even bigger, to become larger than life to an audience of millions." Esposito explores Breslin's connections to underworld figures, showcasing his ability to navigate both the streets and the corridors of power. His infamous interview with Mafia boss Jimmy Burke (immortalized as Jimmy Conway inGoodfellas) and his coverage of the John Gotti trial demonstrate Breslin's unparalleled access to New York's criminal underbelly and highlight his distinctive style of reporting as storytelling, giving voice to a broad range of people he encountered in local bars and other urban venues. "Some would call this the heart of the New Journalism," writes Esposito. "Breslin described it as the old journalism, saying that the only thing he and his colleague Tom Wolfe had discovered was that storytelling had been lost in journalism." Esposito offers insights throughout into Breslin's methods and the changing landscape of newspapers during his career. While his admiration for Breslin's journalistic prowess and stature as a significant figure in American journalism is understandable, the book could have benefited from a more nuanced, less sycophantic perspective; it occasionally reads more like a eulogy than a balanced account. Entertaining and detailed, if overly reverential. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.