Reporter is an account of John McBeths 50-year journey through Asia, more than half of that time as a correspondent for the Far Eastern Economic Review, the venerable magazine long regarded as the regions English-language Bible on political and economic affairs. While necessarily a memoir, the book is more a reflection of the lives of a small group of foreign journalists who came to Asia on a wing and a prayer and in McBeths case by ship and stayed on as fascinated witnesses to a region going through turbulent times and historic change. Part-history, part-analysis, part story-telling and, in a smaller way, part-commentary on the salad days of print journalism and its steady decline under the onslaught of television and the Internet, Reporter introduces us to a diverse cast of journalists, diplomats, officials, politicians and generals McBeth meets and befriends along the way. New in paperback to make 50 years reporting in Asia, the original book has been complemented with a new introduction and a new chapter The Defining Years which bring McBeths story up to date.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 152 x 232mm
Publication Date: 01 Jun 2022
Publisher: Talisman Publishing
Publication City/Country: Singapore
Language: English
ISBN13: 9789811821165
About John McBeth
Leaving behind a farming childhood for a career in journalism McBeth went straight from high school into his hometown newspaper at the age of 17. He left his native New Zealand in 1970 and arrived in Asia by ship intending to travel overland to London and try his hand on Fleet Street. He got as far as Thailand where he spent several years on the Bangkok Post before plunging into freelance work. In 1979 McBeth joined the Far Eastern Economic Review. It was a time of rapid expansion and over the next quarter-century he became the magazines longest-serving correspondent heading its bureaus in Thailand South Korea the Philippines and Indonesia. When the Review was closed in 2004 he went back to freelancing first as a columnist for the Singapores Straits Times and later as a correspondent for the on-line Asia Times. He remains one of the last of a generation of foreign journalists who lived the story and made Asia their home.