In early 1983, Rupert Murdoch, Britain's most powerful newspaper proprietor, offered the editorship of the Sunday Times to the crusted royalty-worshipper and Tory, Alastair Burnet. Burnet refused, pleading old age, but came up at once with an alternative. 'You should,' he told Murdoch, 'go for the best young journalist of his generation.' 'Oh yeah,' Murdoch said, 'and who would that be?' 'Andrew Neil of the Economist' was Burnet's reply. What is our source for this extraordinary conversation? The aforesaid Andrew Neil, on page 25 of this book. Though he immediately describes Burnet's assessment as 'inaccurate', Neil devotes most of the 450 pages which follow to endorsing it. Front-line journalists usually have a high opinion of themselves, but Neil's self-regard is loud, unique, indestructible. As he plods doggedly through his 11 years editing what he describes as one of the most influential newspapers on earth, he is continually dumbfounded by the sheer scale of his achievement.
LRB 12 December 1996 | PDF Download
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