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Hack Attack : The Inside Story of How the Truth Caught up with Rupert Murdoch by Nick Davies (2014, Hardcover)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherFarrar, Straus & Giroux
ISBN-100865478813
ISBN-139780865478817
eBay Product ID (ePID)177290614

Product Key Features

Book TitleHack Attack : the inside Story of How the Truth Caught Up with Rupert Murdoch
Number of Pages448 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicMedia Studies, White Collar Crime, Business Ethics, Corruption & Misconduct, Civil Rights, Social History, Journalism, Sociology / Social Theory, Business
Publication Year2014
IllustratorYes
GenrePolitical Science, True Crime, Social Science, Language Arts & Disciplines, Biography & Autobiography, Business & Economics, History
AuthorNick Davies
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height1.4 in
Item Weight24.7 Oz
Item Length9.3 in
Item Width6.3 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN2014-013578
Dewey Edition23
Reviews[ Hack Attack ] is important, not simply because it is written by a superb reporter who took on a seemingly invulnerable criminal conspiracy, or because it is . . . the best account we have of the phone-hacking scandal and the attendant police corruption and cover-ups. It is, as well, the story of modern Britain and how its standards and politics have been degraded by one man's ruthless acquisition of power. Davies has laid it all bare in an exciting, clear and honest narrative., Praise for Hack Attack "First in The Guardian and now in this book, the reporting of Nick Davies has revealed the insidious abuse of power-and the public trust-by the Murdoch press from the top down. The British hacking scandal is the ultimate expression of Murdoch culture run amok: corruption in the Fourth Estate as dangerous to democracy as the worst excesses of heads of state." -Carl Bernstein "This is the book we've been waiting for, the thrilling and important inside story of how a single reporter came through with the truth of the hacking scandal. He exposed shameful intrusions, the years of deceit, lies, and bullying. And he did more. He revealed a rottenness at the heart of British life in the relations of press, police, and Parliament, institutions that, taken as a whole, failed the big test. Hack Attack is an indictment of the worst of journalism, but is itself an exhilarating demonstration of how the best of journalism-hard-won, honest reporting-is the lifeblood of any democracy." -Sir Harold Evans "Davies . . . makes Captain Ahab and Inspector Javert look like quitters." -Jack Shafer, Slate "Only one reporter has dogged the story from start to finish-deeply sourced among hacking victims, journalists, lawyers, police and politicians. Davies' associates say he excels because he can comprehend the big political picture but also never forgets the vast trove of small, telling details." -James Rainey, The Los Angeles Times, First in The Guardian and now in this book, the reporting of Nick Davies has revealed the insidious abuse of power--and the public trust--by the Murdoch press from the top down. The British hacking scandal is the ultimate expression of Murdoch culture run amok: corruption in the Fourth Estate as dangerous to democracy as the worst excesses of heads of state." --Carl Bernstein "This is the book we've been waiting for, the thrilling and important inside story of how a single reporter came through with the truth of the hacking scandal. He exposed shameful intrusions, the years of deceit, lies, and bullying. And he did more. He revealed a rottenness at the heart of British life in the relations of press, police, and Parliament, institutions that, taken as a whole, failed the big test. Hack Attack is an indictment of the worst of journalism, but is itself an exhilarating demonstration of how the best of journalism--hard-won, honest reporting--is the lifeblood of any democracy." --Sir Harold Evans "Davies . . . makes Captain Ahab and Inspector Javert look like quitters., Nick Davies is Britain's greatest investigative journalist . . . [ Hack Attack ] is as exciting as a thriller but far more important . . . This should be compulsory reading in journalism schools and must be read by anyone who wishes to understand how British politics actually works., Named one of the best books of 2014 by the Financial Times, The Guardian , The Times Literary Supplement , and Kirkus, In July, the jailing of Andy Coulson, David Cameron's former spin doctor, prompted the release of a rash of books which had been waiting on the verdict. The best is Nick Davies' Hack Attack , written with the pacing of a thriller and all the insight you'd expect from the reporter most intimately associated with the case., Davies is the perfect person to corral this massive plume of facts and evasions into a single volume., Only one reporter has dogged the story from start to finish--deeply sourced among hacking victims, journalists, lawyers, police and politicians. Davies' associates say he excels because he can comprehend the big political picture but also never forgets the vast trove of small, telling details., "Davies . . . makes Captain Ahab and Inspector Javert look like quitters." -Jack Shafer, Slate "Only one reporter has dogged the story from start to finish-deeply sourced among hacking victims, journalists, lawyers, police and politicians. Davies' associates say he excels because he can comprehend the big political picture but also never forgets the vast trove of small, telling details." -James Rainey, The Los Angeles Times, Praise for Hack Attack "First in The Guardian and now in this book, the reporting of Nick Davies has revealed the insidious abuse of power-and the public trust-by the Murdoch press from the top down. The British hacking scandal is the ultimate expression of Murdoch culture run amok: corruption in the Fourth Estate as dangerous to democracy as the worst excesses of heads of state." -Carl Bernstein "This is the book we've been waiting for, the thrilling and important inside story of how a single reporter came through with the truth of the hacking scandal. He exposed shameful intrusions, the years of deceit, lies, and bullying. And he did more. He revealed a rottenness at the heart of British life in the relations of press, police, and Parliament, institutions that, taken as a whole, failed the big test. Hack Attack is an indictment of the worst of journalism, but is itself an exhilarating demonstration of how the best of journalism-hard-won, honest reporting-is the lifeblood of any democracy." -Sir Harold Evans "Davies . . . makes Captain Ahab and Inspector Javert look like quitters." -Jack Shafer, Slate "Only one reporter has dogged the story from start to finish-deeply sourced among hacking victims, journalists, lawyers, police and politicians. Davies' associates say he excels because he can comprehend the big political picture but also never forgets the vast trove of small, telling details." -James Rainey, The Los Angeles Times   "In his first-hand, panoramic account of the hacking scandal from 2008 to the present day, Nick Davies artfully draws the connections between Murdoch's newspaper group and the officially powerful, and their corrosive impact on the public's interests . . . Hack Attack captures a picture of bullying and nepotism that should be absent from a democratic society." -Martin Hickman, The Independent, In his first-hand, panoramic account of the hacking scandal from 2008 to the present day, Nick Davies artfully draws the connections between Murdoch's newspaper group and the officially powerful, and their corrosive impact on the public's interests . . . Hack Attack captures a picture of bullying and nepotism that should be absent from a democratic society., Davies is known for his tenacious grip on his targets and his cutting, vivid writing style . . . Davies has crafted nothing less than a primer on how to patiently, doggedly investigate a story., There is so much excess and human pathology on display here, it makes 'Bonfire of the Vanities' seem restrained . . . [Davies] is, as it turns out, just the kind of person you want to have on your tail. It's less about his strategic brilliance and more about an innate refusal to give up--ever., Praise for Hack Attack "First in The Guardian and now in this book, the reporting of Nick Davies has revealed the insidious abuse of power-and the public trust-by the Murdoch press from the top down. The British hacking scandal is the ultimate expression of Murdoch culture run amok: corruption in the Fourth Estate as dangerous to democracy as the worst excesses of heads of state." -Carl Bernstein "This is the book we've been waiting for, the thrilling and important inside story of how a single reporter came through with the truth of the hacking scandal. He exposed shameful intrusions, the years of deceit, lies, and bullying. And he did more. He revealed a rottenness at the heart of British life in the relations of press, police, and Parliament, institutions that, taken as a whole, failed the big test. Hack Attack is an indictment of the worst of journalism, but is itself an exhilarating demonstration of how the best of journalism-hard-won, honest reporting-is the lifeblood of any democracy." -Sir Harold Evans Praise for Nick Davies   "Davies . . . makes Captain Ahab and Inspector Javert look like quitters." -Jack Shafer, Slate "Only one reporter has dogged the story from start to finish-deeply sourced among hacking victims, journalists, lawyers, police and politicians. Davies' associates say he excels because he can comprehend the big political picture but also never forgets the vast trove of small, telling details." -James Rainey, The Los Angeles Times, [I]f any one person deserves to place himself squarely at the center of this tale, it is Mr. Davies, who spent three years chipping away at a tower of lies, enduring attacks on his credibility and overcoming stonewalling of the first order to produce his account of tabloid criminality and British officialdom's role in covering it up . . . As Mr. Davies pursues his quarry, readers are introduced to the seamy underside of Fleet Street, a brutally transactional place of 'casual treachery' where people volunteer 'to sell the secrets of those who most trust them' . . . It's journalism noir, and it's not surprising that last week George Clooney announced that he plans to direct a film version of 'Hack Attack' . . . As Mr. Davies puts it, 'Power enjoys secrecy, because it increases its scope.' It takes tenacious muckrakers like Mr. Davies to upend that dynamic., Nick Davies, the Guardian reporter who led that newspaper's lonely (at first) revelations of phone hacking at the News of the World , has, in his exhumation of this trove of journalistic ordure, done a colossal service to Britain's democracy . . . Hack Attack is the book of a very bold reporter about a passage of arms that he won, to our great benefit., This book is a major achievement: a master class in investigative journalism made all the more fascinating by the wealth of color that's like something from another era., Hack Attack is an important reminder of the evils that can result when the media itself becomes so powerful and corrupt that it is accountable to no one--least of all to the public whose interests they are intended to serve., First in The Guardian and now in this book, the reporting of Nick Davies has revealed the insidious abuse of power--and the public trust--by the Murdoch press from the top down. The British hacking scandal is the ultimate expression of Murdoch culture run amok: corruption in the Fourth Estate as dangerous to democracy as the worst excesses of heads of state., Praise for Hack Attack "First in The Guardian and now in this book, the reporting of Nick Davies has revealed the insidious abuse of power-and the public trust-by the Murdoch press from the top down. The British hacking scandal is the ultimate expression of Murdoch culture run amok: corruption in the Fourth Estate as dangerous to democracy as the worst excesses of heads of state." -Carl Bernstein "This is the book we've been waiting for, the thrilling and important inside story of how a single reporter came through with the truth of the hacking scandal. He exposed shameful intrusions, the years of deceit, lies, and bullying. And he did more. He revealed a rottenness at the heart of British life in the relations of press, police, and Parliament, institutions that, taken as a whole, failed the big test. Hack Attack is an indictment of the worst of journalism, but is itself an exhilarating demonstration of how the best of journalism-hard-won, honest reporting-is the lifeblood of any democracy." -Sir Harold Evans "Nick Davies is Britain's greatest investigative journalist . . . [ Hack Attack ] is as exciting as a thriller but far more important . . . This should be compulsory reading in journalism schools and must be read by anyone who wishes to understand how British politics actually works." -Peter Oborne, The Telegraph   "[ Hack Attack ] is important, not simply because it is written by a superb reporter who took on a seemingly invulnerable criminal conspiracy, or because it is . . . the best account we have of the phone-hacking scandal and the attendant police corruption and cover-ups. It is, as well, the story of modern Britain and how its standards and politics have been degraded by one man's ruthless acquisition of power. Davies has laid it all bare in an exciting, clear and honest narrative." -Henry Porter, The Observer   "Nick Davies, the Guardian reporter who led that newspaper's lonely (at first) revelations of phone hacking at the News of the World , has, in his exhumation of this trove of journalistic ordure, done a colossal service to Britain's democracy . . . Hack Attack is the book of a very bold reporter about a passage of arms that he won, to our great benefit." -John Lloyd, Financial Times   "In his first-hand, panoramic account of the hacking scandal from 2008 to the present day, Nick Davies artfully draws the connections between Murdoch's newspaper group and the officially powerful, and their corrosive impact on the public's interests . . . Hack Attack captures a picture of bullying and nepotism that should be absent from a democratic society." -Martin Hickman, The Independent   "Davies . . . makes Captain Ahab and Inspector Javert look like quitters." -Jack Shafer, Slate "Only one reporter has dogged the story from start to finish-deeply sourced among hacking victims, journalists, lawyers, police and politicians. Davies' associates say he excels because he can comprehend the big political picture but also never forgets the vast trove of small, telling details." -James Rainey, The Los Angeles Times, You would expect the Guardian's Nick Davies, who exposed phone hacking and other criminality among News of the World journalists, to write the best full-length account of the scandal, and so he has. He gives us not just the story . . . but also the story behind the story, explaining how and why he set about exposing the NoW's endemic criminality.
Dewey Decimal072/.1
Table Of ContentWho's Who Author's Note PART ONE: CRIME AND CONCEALMENT 1. February 2008 to July 2009 2. Inside the News of the World 3. 8 July 2009 to 14 July 2009 4. Crime in Fleet Street 5. 14 July 2009 to November 2009 6. Secrets and Lies PART TWO: THE POWER GAME 7. A Wedding in the Country 8. November 2009 to March 2009 9. The Mogul and his Governments 10. March 2010 to 15 December 2010 11. The Biggest Deal in the world 12. 15 December 2010 to 28 June 2011 13. The Last Ditch PART THREE: TRUTH 14. 28 June 2011 to 19 July 2011 15. Exposed! 16. Final Reckoning Epilogue Appendix Index
SynopsisThe definitive book on how the News of the World phone-hacking scandal reached the highest echelons of power in the government, security, and media in the UK, from the journalist who broke the story. At first, it seemed like a small story. The royal editor of the News of the World was caught listening to the voicemail messages of staff at Buckingham Palace. He and a private investigator were jailed, and the case was closed. But Nick Davies, special correspondent for The Guardian , knew that it didn't add up. He began to investigate, and ended up exposing a world of crime and cover-up, of fear and favor--the long shadow of Rupert Murdoch's media empire. Hack Attack is the mesmerizing story of how Davies and a small group of lawyers and politicians took on one of the most powerful men in the world--and beat him. It exposes the inner workings of the ruthless machine that was the News of the World , and of the private investigators who hacked phones, listened to live calls, sent Trojan horse emails, bribed the police, and committed burglaries to dig up tabloid scoops. Above all, it is a study of the private lives of the power elite. It paints an intimate portrait of the social network that gave Murdoch privileged access to government, and allowed him and his lieutenants to intimidate anyone who stood up to them. Spanning the course of the investigation from Davies's contact with his first source in early 2008 to the resolution of the criminal trial in June 2014, this is the definitive record of one of the major scandals of our time, written by the journalist who was there every step of the way.
LC Classification NumberPN5130.N48D38 2014