Julien Gorbach spent most of his ten years as a daily newspaper reporter on the police beat, covering drive-by shootings and murder trials, and publishing an investigative series on killings that remained unsolved because gangs had intimidated witnesses into silence. As a freelancer, he contributed to the Boston Phoenix, Time Out New York, the San Francisco Bay Guardian, and the New Orleans Gambit, among other publications. He covered Hurricane Katrina for the Boston Globe. Gorbach earned a doctorate in media history at the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2013 and is now an assistant professor in the School of Communications at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
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Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction Prelude: The Lost Land of Boyhood Part I: THE NEWSPAPERMAN The Chicago School of Journalism Chapter 1: The Chicago School Chapter 2: Shades of Black: The Stages of Hecht's Cynicism Chapter 3: Propagandist in Training Chapter 4: The Journalist and the Gangster Part II: THE WRITER The Chicago Renaissance and Hollywood Chapter 5: The Chicago Renaissance: Little Children of the Arts Chapter 6: Crying in the Wilderness Chapter 7: The Un-Jewish Jew Chapter 8: Return Part III: THE ZIONIST From Humanist to Public Enemy Chapter 9: Jewish Knights: The Bergson Group Chapter 10: "Champion in Chains" Chapter 11: Campaign for a Jewish Army Chapter 12: "A Challenge to the Soul of Men" Chapter 13: "One of the Greatest Crimes in History" Chapter 14: Blood and Fire Chapter 15: Only Thus Part IV: THE MEMOIRIST Writing about L.A.'s Al Capone Chapter 16: "Some Kind of Strength" Chapter 17: Champion in Chains, Revisited Chapter 18: The Old New Journalist Chapter 19: Time Out for Psychology Conclusion Selected Bibliography Notes Index

