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The Fourth
Estate
Lubji Hoch breaks the
bonds of his humble beginnings as the son of an illiterate Jewish
peasant, escapes the Nazis, changes his name to Richard Armstrong,
becomes a decorated officer in the British army, and ultimately
finds himself in Berlin, where his sharp mind and killer instincts
win him the opportunity to head up a floundering newspaper. As
rival papers in the city fail in the wake of his ruthlessness,
he nonetheless yearns to move on to even greater things.
On the other side of the world, in Australia,
Keith Townsend, son of a millionaire newspaper owner, is being
groomed to follow in his father's footsteps. Private schools,
an Oxford degree, and a position at a London newspaper lead him
up to the time of his father's death, when he takes over the family
business. His energy and brilliant strategic thinking quickly
make him the leading newspaper publisher in Australia. Yet he
too longs to move on to the world stage.
As both Armstrong and Townsend seize control
of everything they see, their ambitions collide on a global scale.
But suddenly they both find themselves threatened by finicial
disaster and enormous debt. Frantic to save his crumbling empire,
each man turns desperate. One's quest will lead to triumph, the
other's will end in tragedy in this awesome tale of wealth and
corruption, desire and destruction.
The Fourth Estate
is the timely and compelling story of two men who, though they
come from totally different backgrounds, stand face-to-face on
the highest precipice, prepared to risk everything to beat each
other and control the biggest media empire in the world.
Interesting
fact:
Jeffrey
often bases his protagonists on real people. In this instance,
the rival newspaper magnates were modelled on the late Robert
Maxwell and Rupert Murdoch.
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