Críticas:
"He was the kind of journalist of whom his sub-editing colleagues back in Fleet Street would say enviously, 'He writes like an angel.' Richard did indeed: you can see it in this delightful book."John Simpson "... the best journalistic autobiography since James Cameron's Point of Departure 30 years ago... he provides one of the best concise accounts of Watergate, as well as writing about Vietnam with a rare understanding and sympathy." Anthony Howard, The Sunday Times "Sometimes this book makes one's heart ache for a vanished world, other times one's sides almost split with mirth."Stephen Glover, The Spectator "...marvellous reminiscences of the scrapes, farces and dangers of 40 years filing from the world's danger spots."Michael Binyon, The Times "In my opinion the reporter heads the pack in any newspaper office; and the foreign correspondent, so often called upon suddenly to cover the impossible story, comes just ahead of him. Dick Beeston belongs to that distinguished genre."Lord Deedes, The Daily Telegraph "Richard Beeston was the last of a breed, a foreign correspondent at a time when abroad was as important as home. His gentle memoir combines Scoop-like anecdotes with the authentic feeling of being there." Robert Chesshyre, New Statesman "Journalism is the first raw draft of history". Phil Graham, publisher of the Washington Post Conde Nast Traveller (UK Edition), 1 October 2006 (chosen as one of the reviewer's Travel Books of the Month) 'Another breed nearly extinct in its classic form is the foreign correspondent. They didn't come much better than Richard Beeston...for a history of the recent past as it actually happened...read this excellent book.' - Giles Foden DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Like the best of the foreign correspondents' memoirs, it reads like a cocktail of the hard stuff- political insight, on-the- ground analysis- topped off with fizzy draughts of intercontinental gossip, reckless flights into war zones and run-ins with rebels and despots.' -Jonathan GibbsCONTEMPORARY REVIEWBeeston's experience covered some of the greatest conflicts of the last century, from the Belgian Congo to Vietnam.
Reseña del editor:
"Looking for Trouble" is a vivid account of 35 years in journalism by a former foreign correspondent and bureau chief of "The Daily Telegraph". It recounts an extraordinary and eventful period in the years before instant communication and mass TV coverage and provides a riveting first-hand record of history unfurling during many of the world's most dramatic events of the Cold War era. Richard Beeston describes what the restless, nomadic life of a foreign correspondent is like, providing colourful and lively portrayals of daily life in "Fleet Street" and communist Moscow; of his years with a radio station for MI6 in the Middle East; and of his acquaintance with the notorious Soviet agent, Kim Philby. Richard Beeston led a truly extraordinary life, superbly captured in this acclaimed memoir - now published in paperback for the first time.
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