The Almighty
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Narrated by:
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Chuck Brown
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By:
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Irving Wallace
About this listen
Edward Armstead has lived much of his life in the shadow of his famous media lord father. When his father dies, he leaves a will that makes it nearly impossible for Edward to keep the thign he wants most - The New York Record - his father's flagship newspaper. Edward's determination to exceed his father drives him to embark on two obssesive quiests - to make the New York Reporter the number one nerwspaper in the city - and the the world - and to make his father's young mistress his own.
In a swiftly paced and prescient story reaching out of Manhattan into the inner circles of power in England, France, Spain, Switzerland, and Israel, a growing wave of violence gives the publisher sensational headlines, exclusive to the Record, that turn Armstead into a media legend almost overnight.
As Weston begins to believe his own hype, considering himself media's 'Almighty', a young, prize-winning investigative reporter on his staff, Victoria Weston, begins to suspect that someone is manipulating front-page news. As she follows her investigation through France and back to Manhattan, she begins to suspect the terrible truth.
This novel brings Rupert Murdoch and the current string of media scandals immediately to mind. A sobering tale of power, corruption, and madness at the highest levels from a master craftsman of the written word.
©1982 David Wallechinsky & Amy Wallace (P)2013 David N. WilsonWhat listeners say about The Almighty
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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- Jane Hyland
- 01-04-2023
Strange narrating
I had read the book years ago and enjoyed listening to the audible version. Great story but the narrating, other than the dialogue, was like the narrator was reading a newspaper. There was also some strange pronunciation. The French Sûreté was pronounced throughout as sureet. And the protagonist was called Veronica instead of Victoria on at least one occasion.
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