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Rogues and Redeemers: When Politics Was King in Irish Boston
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Rogues and Redeemers: When Politics Was King in Irish Boston Hardcover - 2012

by O'Neill, Gerard

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Details

  • Title Rogues and Redeemers: When Politics Was King in Irish Boston
  • Author O'Neill, Gerard
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Condition Used - Good
  • Pages 401
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Crown Publishing Group (NY), UK
  • Date 2012-03-13
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 0307405362.G
  • ISBN 9780307405364 / 0307405362
  • Weight 1.39 lbs (0.63 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.3 x 6.42 x 1.39 in (23.62 x 16.31 x 3.53 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Boston (Mass.), Boston (Mass.) - Politics and government
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2010053207
  • Dewey Decimal Code 974.461

From the publisher

GERARD O'NEILL was editor of the Boston Globe's investigative team for 25 years before retiring to teach graduate courses in journalism at Boston University. With Dick Lehr, he coauthored The Underboss in 1989 and  Black Mass in 2000. Black Mass was a New York Times bestseller and number one on the Globe's bestseller list for a year. He has won several regional and national reporting awards over several decades, including the Pulitzer; the Associated Press Managing Editors Award in 1977 and 1998; the Loeb Awards for business reporting in 1991; and was a Pulitzer finalist in 1997. He holds a master's in journalism from Boston University and lives in Back Bay with his wife, Janet. He has two sons.

Media reviews

 “…a lively and highly readable study of the political figures who shaped and then reshaped the city in the 20th century.”--The Boston Globe

 "In Rogues and Redeemers, Gerard O'Neill brings his native knowledge and wit to bear on a regional political tradition as wily -- and felonious -- as any in U.S. history. From Honey Fitz to Curley to Ray Flynn -- they're all here, in a tight, entertaining narrative filled with triumph and tragedy."-- T.J. English, author of The Savage City and Paddy Whacked
 
“Gerry O’Neill’s entertaining and instructive book about the role of the Irish in Boston politics combines important insights about the role of ethnicity in American society, and a refreshingly positive discussion of the role that politics plays in our democracy. It’s an excellent antidote to those who would either sanitize or demonize both subjects.”—Barney Frank
 
"Gerard O'Neill brings Boston magnificently to life as the true star of its own saga - a tragic hero to be sure, full of hubris and waste. But also, as the title suggest, rife with redemption. O'Neill has written this generation's Last Hurrah."--James Carroll, Author of Jerusalem, Jerusalem
 
 
"The great Gerry O'Neill, Irish America's premier investigative reporter, gives a wry but unvarnished account of the crooks and misfits - and, yes, the redeemers - of his clan. This is a soaring tale, across a century, of how the Irish employed politics to escape the urban ghettoes, how their excess helped lead to Boston's plunge into hatred and decay, until a few rugged sons discarded the crutches of corruption and resentment, and joined others in building the world class city we know today." –John A. Farrell author of Tip O’Neill and the Democratic Century
 
“Rogues and Redeemers is a joy to read. The author's colorful prose keeps the reader riveted as the history of Boston politics unfolds from the reign of the rascal king, James Michael Curley, to Ed Logue's grand design for urban renewal and Judge Garrity's flawed plan to integrate the city's school. Certain to become a classic, it is one of the best histories of Boston ever written.”--Jay P. Dolan, Author of The Irish Americans: A History

About the author

GERARD O'NEILL was editor of the "Boston Globe's" investigative team for 25 years before retiring to teach graduate courses in journalism at Boston University. With Dick Lehr, he coauthored "The Underboss" in 1989 and "Black Mass" in 2000. "Black Mass" was a "New York Times" bestseller and number one on the "Globe's" bestseller list for a year. He has won several regional and national reporting awards over several decades, including the Pulitzer; the Associated Press Managing Editors Award in 1977 and 1998; the Loeb Awards for business reporting in 1991; and was a Pulitzer finalist in 1997. He holds a master's in journalism from Boston University and lives in Back Bay with his wife, Janet. He has two sons.