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The Publisher: Henry Luce and His American Century (2010)

di Alan Brinkley

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Acclaimed historian Alan Brinkley gives us a sharply realized portrait of Henry Luce, arguably the most important publisher of the twentieth century. As the founder of "Time," "Fortune, "and "Life "magazines, Luce changed the way we consume news and the way we understand our world.
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TNR has published a nice Jackson Lears review essay at http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/75608/easy-rider but you have to be a subscriber to access it... ( )
  Dreyfusard | Sep 9, 2021 |
This is an interesting biography of Henry Luce, painting him as a brilliant but very eccentric man. Alan Brinkley details how he built his publishing empire starting with the creation of Time magazine and eventually including Life, Fortune and Sports Illustrated. Luce's publications were generally anti-FDR, but were not explicitly political until the 1940 presidential election. His unreserved support for Wendel Wilkie pushed his magazines into blatant advocacy. From then until 1960, when he endorsed JFK, Luce viewed his publications as a means to exert himself and affect the direction of the country.

His biggest and most obvious project was trying the rally support for Chiang Kai-shek's failing regime in China. Luce was born and raised by American missionaries in China. His interest in the country was rekindled by a trip to China during the second Sino-Japanese War when he met Chiang and his wife. From then, he was convinced that Chiang was one of the greatest men of his era and the only hope for China. He hated Truman, whom he always blamed for losing China, but was mixed about Ambassador John Leighton Stuart, who had been a missionary and was, like Luce, a Presbyterian.

Brinkley describes Luce as a lonely man with few friends and a shaky marriage. His real love was having a project or a mission. That mission was initially creating Time and subsequent magazines but then became Wilkie's presidential run. The mission then became supporting WWII, Chiang, and Eisenhower. Luce appeared to be happiest and most energized when throwing himself into one of the projects. Without that sense of mission, he became restless.

This is one of the most readable biographies I have read, yet it is still informative. It spends a bit too much time on Luce's inner turmoil than I would have preferred, but it does paint a very vivid picture of the man. ( )
  Scapegoats | Sep 24, 2011 |
Henry Luce was the creator of Time, Fortune, Life, Sports Illustrated and their parent company Time Life Books. I was aware of this fact, however, this well written biography informed me how influential Luce really was. Born to Christian missionary parents who lived in China during his formative years, Luce was a precocious and competetive scholar through and including his academic career at Yale. His creative genius was the invention of new magazines with which he hoped to inform, and perhaps educated Mencken's boobousie. As he became sucessfull, he wanted more and more to use his magazines to shape public opinion along paths he believed in. Specifically he wanted a Republican, pro-business voice, with increasing anti-communist leanings. Along the way he perhaps sacrificed journalistic purity; however, he never became "right-wing kooky." He hated FDR, but apparently supported many of this policies. He adored Ike. Although he probably supported Nixon in secret, he also admired Kennedy for his intelligence and vision for America. Above all Luce wanted to affirmatively champion American values with emphasis on the positive - not the negative. Frustrated by his limited role as a publisher, Luce apparently wanted a larger role in the world. His thin skin, however, ensured that he never could have succeeded as a politician. He was somewhat of a cold intellectual who could never develope any intimacy with friends or his wives, whom he serially cheated on. ( )
  nemoman | May 15, 2010 |
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“The Publisher” has its parched passages, most notably when it ventures into the thickets of Luce’s “big” ideas. It works best when the man is well within sight. But Mr. Brinkley is dauntless in assessing Luce’s most important accomplishments, like his “American Century” essay and other efforts to tell Americans what American life was like. Life magazine had no temerity about devoting a major series in the 1950s to “Man’s New World: How He Lives in It.” Now that Man’s New World is so different from anything Henry Luce could imagine, his life and times are more poignant than they once seemed.
 
Luce is now the subject of a monumental, magisterial biography, the finest ever written about an American journalist, a book that secures Luce's large if problematic place in history. Those with personal knowledge of the inner workings of Luce's empire may complain that Alan Brinkley, a historian, captures only part of the flavor of that strange place -- more on that presently -- but he gets the big picture exactly right and does so with even-handedness, a remarkable achievement considering the controversy that swirled around Luce almost from the moment he stepped onto the public stage in February 1923.
 
aggiunto da Shortride | modificaBookforum, Michael Lind (Apr 1, 2010)
 
With periodic recourse to the hoard of gossip available from previous books, Brinkley re-creates Luce as an Eminent American, royally and sometimes picturesquely flawed... yet it may not reflect the best spirit in which to approach the Luce phenomenon. Luce’s magazines did change the media world, and one cannot imagine modern journalism without his looming presence. But Luce isn’t easily rendered as an Eminent American. He was an original, touched with madness, in some aspects richly dislikable.
 
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Acclaimed historian Alan Brinkley gives us a sharply realized portrait of Henry Luce, arguably the most important publisher of the twentieth century. As the founder of "Time," "Fortune, "and "Life "magazines, Luce changed the way we consume news and the way we understand our world.

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