Book Review: Chasing History
By Robert McCool
Icon Columnist
“A kid in the newsroom” is the subtitle of Carl Bernstein's new book, a memoir of his start in journalism. Chasing History (Thorndike Press, ISBN- 13: 978-4328-9865-6) is Bernstein's account of his own history during a most interesting time in our country's historically turbulent 1950s and early ‘60s.
The time frame starts while Eisenhower is president and John F. Kennedy is a senator. Richard Nixon is vice president. The country is stagnant because of Eisenhower's tired style of ruling, after World War II's intensity and death toll.
Racism is an issue, with the country still living with Jim Crow laws. Blacks are still not free nor equal to whites. Segregation simmers in all places and schools refuse to integrate, even after a legislated rule says different. Later, marches begin to occur in the south, birthing the Freedom Riders. This is the issue that Bernstein takes on as his own early in his employment at the Washington Star newspaper.
The book is more than a remembrance, it's a primer on how a newspaper functions, with Bernstein starting as a runner when he is just sixteen. The lessons in journalism and publishing pull us along as it did the author. His goal, his mission, is to become a reporter, which he desires more than graduating high school (he did), or getting a college education (he didn't). His education is in ink and deadlines. Taken into the machine that tells the news to the U.S. capital, Washington DC, he is a quick study and a quicker typist, so he climbs up the hierarchy, first as a copy boy. He continues rising in the ranks and following the segregation issue. He will do so until he is twenty, becoming a seasoned reporter following the great struggle of blacks seeking equality.
Bernstein is a newsman and he writes like a newsman. He covers the who, what, when, where and why as he writes his intimate tale of the people who helped him or who thwarted his efforts. And he does drop names all the way through the book. He knows scores of great people and makes no bones about naming names and what they did.
He worked the Kennedy presidential election, his blockade of Cuba and the Russian mission threat, Kennedy's handling of the growing equal-rights movement, and his assassination. He follows Johnson's emergence as a new president who must still deal with segregation and the escalating Vietnam war.
This book is also the chronicle of a great newspaper's life, and its downfall when the Washington Post takes over the Star's rival newspaper and grows exponentially. Remember, Bernstein went to work at the Washington Post where he and co-worker Bob Woodward reported the Watergate crimes.
A poignant search for the truth is in all the stories he wrote, and in this book, what Carl Bernstein portrays is his work as a newspaper man. That truth is seen throughout this book, and it is an enjoyable read.
Stories Posted This Week
Thursday, July 2, 2026
- Ada Icon headlines, July 2
- Obituary for Lois C. Fischer
- 4th of July events celebrating American 250 in Bluffton
- Watercolor Workshop scheduled at Bluffton Public Library
- Mobile Health Clinic coming on July 9
- T-Rex Tea Party at the Bluffton Public Library
- Critters, Flitters, and Gallinippers: SCHS 2nd Saturday, July 11
- Surveyor James Riley will time travel on July 4
- The Air That I Breathe: Air Pollution and Omega-3 Fatty Acids
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
- Ada Icon headlines, July 1
- June School Board: Bernal resigns as elementary principal, lunch prices increase
- WOAL League Champs in Kenton July 10 and 11
- 2026 Swiss Day celebration focuses on past and future
- Senior Center offers Bus Trips with Debbie
- Senior Center's July Dinner meeting topic: The history of Dixie Highway
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Monday, June 29, 2026
- Ada Icon headlines, Jun 29
- Lima Meijer closed on June 29 following shots fired
- Ohio EMA tips for extreme heat conditions this week
- Scavenger hunt at Senior Center
- Bluffton University streamlines MBA program for working professionals
- July 2026: What brings you to Bluffton?
- America 250 Quilt Raffle is underway
- More than a car show: 58th annual Festival of Wheels
- Allen County residents invited to provide feedback on Hazard Mitigation Plan