Selected Product: | Scoop: A Novel About Journalists (Penguin Modern Classics) Paperback Edition: New edition Author: Evelyn Waugh Publisher: Penguin Classics Release Date: August 2003 ISBN-10: 0141187492 ISBN-13: 9780141187495 List Price: £8.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Scoop: A Novel About Journalists (Penguin Modern Classics) by Evelyn Waugh (ISBN-10: 0141187492, ISBN-13: 9780141187495). At this time we have not yet written a review for Scoop: A Novel About Journalists (Penguin Modern Classics) by Evelyn Waugh (ISBN-10: 0141187492, ISBN-13: 9780141187495). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com What goes around, comes around | Customer Rating: | This is the first Evelyn Waugh novel I have read and found it very humorous in places. Whilst this was clearly set in the 1930's the parallels with modern news gathering struck a chord with me. Sometimes when I sit and watch the 24 hour news programmes it strikes me that journalists are merely trying to 'create' a story in order to fill time - something that Waugh parodies in this novel about newsprint journalists over 70 years ago. Which makes me smile even more. Waugh proves the old saying that 'what goes around, comes around'. Yes, I agree with some of the other reviewers here, that many of the comments and phrases would not sit right in today's world, but the essence of the story and the basis for the humour is just as valid today as it was in the 1930's.
A great read if you can accept the dated language. | Laugh a minuite! | Customer Rating: | Scoop made me laugh out loud so many times! I love it when a book wholly engages you and you get drawn physically into the readng process (ie laughing, crying)and Waugh made me do this! This is the first of Waugh's novels that i have read but i do intend tp pick up some more on my holiday this year. Although confusing and disorientaing by nature you do get pulled along by the plot nicely which means it is always hard to choose a spot to put the book down! A book full of oddities of character and setting with mistakes and faux pars a plenty! - Just remember not to try to put it into todays context - as then you may find it a bit offensive! | A funny book set in a politically incorrect era | Customer Rating: | First published in 1938, Scoop is billed as one of the funniest novel ever written about journalism. Which says a lot: have you seen how many fiction books revolve around the Fourth Estate?
In this book, which is essentially a comedy of errors, we meet William Boot, who is mistaken for John Courtney Boot, an eminent writer, and is sent off to the African Republic of Ishmaelia to report on a little known war for the Daily Beast.
With no journalistic training and far out of his depth, Boot struggles to comprehend what it is he is being paid to do and makes one blunder after another all in the pursuit of hot news. In fact Booth is so out of his depth he does not even know how to write a telegram -- the main means of filing his reports to the London office (remember, this is long before the days of email or the internet or even decent telecommunications) -- much less what constitutes a news story.
The entire book is littered with examples that not only demonstrate one man's incomprehension when it comes to news gathering, but highlights the extraordinary games that editors and newspaper proprietors play to beat the opposition.
But Scoop is not just a scathing satire on journalism, it also pokes fun at the upper classes and their eccentric ways (the final chapters when Boot's boss visits him at his family's rural estate are uproariously funny). And given the time in which it was written, it also says much about the English Empire and the treatment of her colonial subjects, not in a very positive light I might add.
All in all, a funny book set in a politically incorrect era that will undoubtedly appeal to journalists and anyone interested in the news media. |
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