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A Bomb in Every Issue: How the Short, Unruly Life of Ramparts Magazine Changed America (Hardcover)
$25.95
Not Currently In Stock at Our Stores
Description
A Bomb in Every Issue tells the largely untold story of the wild ride of this hugely influential magazine that achieved countless firsts: it published the first conspiracy theory about JFK's assassination, it was the first to reveal that the CIA had backed the National Student Association during the Cold War, and its article about the use of napalm on Vietnamese children (another first) caused Martin Luther King Jr. to speak out against the war for the first time.Launched in 1962 as an intellectual Catholic quarterly, within five years Ramparts had become a secular magazine and won a George Polk Award for "its explosive revival of the great muckraking tradition." Deeply committed to the civil rights and antiwar movements, its contributors included Noam Chomsky, Cesar Chavez, Seymour Hersh, Angela Davis, and Susan Sontag. It was in its pages that Che Guevera's diaries and the prison diaries of Eldridge Cleaver (which became Soul on Ice) first appeared. But by 1975, out of money and time, it had folded for good.Ramparts was "the journalistic equivalent of a rock band," Richardson argues and, despite its early demise, it left an important journalistic legacy, influencing a generation of reporters and editors, that is still apparent today.
Praise for A Bomb in Every Issue: How the Short, Unruly Life of Ramparts Magazine Changed America…
This book satisfies on every level . . .”
—New York Times Book Review
Short, explosive, unforgotten: the story of Ramparts magazine and its lingering influence long after it was gone.”
—L.A. Times
Peter Richardson . . . charts the publications’ high points with a gleam in his eye.”
—New York Times




