Fülszöveg
Each weekend The Sunday Times
offers its four million readers not
only a balanced report of the week's
news, but also some of the shrewdest
comment, the best informed
analysis, the liveliest criticism, and,
quite simply, the best writing, to be
found in Fleet Street or elsewhere.
In this, the second Sunday Times
Bedside Book, the editor, George
Darby, has made a choice of some of
the best pieces that have appeared in
the paper and the magazine over a
period of twelve months.
The range is enormous. Those
who follow politics will enjoy Hugo
Young on Mrs Thatcher and David
Blundy on Ronald Reagan; for
sports fans, there is Michael
Parkinson on the hazards of playing
golf with the professional greats, or
Brian Glanville bursting into verse to
mark Spurs' acquisition of two
Argentinian players; connoisseurs of
modern mores can relish Tina Brown
on Bunny girls or Anthony Holden
on Studio 54; in more serious mood,
Jon Swain and Philip Jacobson
remind us of two...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
Each weekend The Sunday Times
offers its four million readers not
only a balanced report of the week's
news, but also some of the shrewdest
comment, the best informed
analysis, the liveliest criticism, and,
quite simply, the best writing, to be
found in Fleet Street or elsewhere.
In this, the second Sunday Times
Bedside Book, the editor, George
Darby, has made a choice of some of
the best pieces that have appeared in
the paper and the magazine over a
period of twelve months.
The range is enormous. Those
who follow politics will enjoy Hugo
Young on Mrs Thatcher and David
Blundy on Ronald Reagan; for
sports fans, there is Michael
Parkinson on the hazards of playing
golf with the professional greats, or
Brian Glanville bursting into verse to
mark Spurs' acquisition of two
Argentinian players; connoisseurs of
modern mores can relish Tina Brown
on Bunny girls or Anthony Holden
on Studio 54; in more serious mood,
Jon Swain and Philip Jacobson
remind us of two of the world's
Vissza