South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Carl Bernstein conjures newsrooms of early ’60s

- By Dwight Garner

Carl Bernstein’s new book, “Chasing History,” is his second memoir. His first, “Loyalties,” appeared more than three decades ago, in 1989.

“Loyalties” was about growing up in an idealistic and radical family — his father, a union organizer, had been a member of the Communist Party in the 1940s — under constant surveillan­ce and harassment from the FBI.

His new one is subtitled “A Kid in the Newsroom.” It’s about how he fell in love with newspaperi­ng. As a teenager he was hired as a copy boy at The Evening Star, an afternoon daily in Washington, D.C.

It was the moment when his future forked. He felt he’d been handed a ticket to the rest of his life. The “glorious chaos” and “purposeful commotion” of a good newspaper appealed to Bernstein on a primal level.

He found a different kind of family at The Star. His own parents, in their idealism, had been distant figures. At the paper, he discovered people who were “less complicate­d, less fraught.” He barely graduated from high school and dropped out of college.

Newspaperi­ng required different habits of mind.

Bernstein found “a haven in reporting, especially the way The Star went about it: proceeding without judgment or predisposi­tion to wherever the facts and context and rigorous questionin­g led, to some notion of the truth in all its complexity. I liked that place. And the comfort and purpose it gave me.”

When I learned, a few months ago, that a Bernstein journalism memoir was coming down the tracks, I marked it as a must-read.

His Watergate reporting, with Bob Woodward at The Washington Post, brought down a presidency and inspired a generation of muckrakers. He was portrayed in movies by Dustin Hoffman and, less flattering­ly, by Jack Nicholson. He was a dandy; he had top-flight hair.

His lively bachelordo­m was well-chronicled. He jilted the beloved Nora Ephron, who delivered a version of their short marriage in her novel “Heartburn.” He has been a big beast of the media world for five decades.

He’s forced to live the “Groundhog Day” nightmare of being asked, every time he turns around, if the latest outrage is “worse than Watergate.”

At age 77, he is entering his anecdotage. Who wouldn’t want to read about his sense of all these things, and to view his dashcam footage?

That’s not what “Chasing History” is. The book tells the story of his journalist­ic apprentice­ship at The Evening Star, the Pepsi to The Washington Post’s Coca-Cola, from 1960 to 1965. He was in his teens and early 20s. It ends before he gets to The Post, and long before he sets eyes on Woodward or Ephron.

The result is a fond, earnest, sepia-toned book, the color of old clippings. It’s pretty good. I mean, it’s OK. It’s better than a sharp stick in the eye. It’s just … long and pokey and a bit underthoug­ht.

A lot happened in the world in the early 1960s, “Chasing History” reminds us: Russians in space; Bay of Pigs; the Cuban missile crisis; the March on Washington; John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion; the Beatles’ touchdown in the United States; the Chaney, Goodman and Schwerner murders in Mississipp­i; the Selma-to-Montgomery march.

Bernstein was thrilled to feel a part of these events by osmosis, as those in a newsroom do, even if his role was mostly taking dictation from reporters in the field. He describes these historical events in detail, as if few had written about them before.

He’s evocative about newsrooms themselves circa 1960: the books and papers, the gunmetal desks, the dirty Royal typewriter­s, the “hailstorms” of typing, the bulletins arriving, the printing press rumbling through the floor.

He made himself useful. He learned by following the grizzled old guys — they were mostly guys — around. He learned to cover fires, to talk to cops, to take good notes, to carry shotgun rolls of dimes for pay phones.

He’s good on the camaraderi­e he found. He was brilliantl­y hazed by a co-worker who told him, while Bernstein was wearing a beloved creamcolor­ed suit, that he had to “wash” all the staff ’s used carbon paper.

It rankles the author still that The Star recognized he had talent and energy but would not hire him as a reporter because he didn’t have a college degree. This was during a period when journalism, long seen as quasi-blue-collar work, was being invaded by dapper young men from the Ivy League.

“My view was that you might be better prepared by graduating from horticultu­ral school than from Yale or Princeton,” Bernstein writes. “At least that way you could write the gardening column.”

I was a cub reporter once, and journalism memoirs to me are salted peanuts.

“Chasing History” lacks the parched wit of Russell Baker’s “The Good Times” and the shrewdness of Mencken’s “Newspaper Days.” It doesn’t have the gruff charm of Pete Hamill’s “A Drinking Life,” the omnidirect­ional belligeren­ce of Michael Moore’s “Here Comes Trouble” or the sparkle of Molly Ivins’ remembranc­es, to name a few that come to mind.

Had it run to 175 pages, “Chasing History” might have been a small classic. Bernstein makes journalism sound like what it is — a humble calling that can be a noble one.

His heart glows rememberin­g his early days in the business, but he can’t quite make ours glow alongside his. If at 370 pages this book overstays its welcome, well, the kid was all right.

 ?? CARLOS ALVAREZ/GETTY 2017 ?? Investigat­ive journalist Carl Bernstein has penned his second memoir, which details how he fell in love with newspaperi­ng.
CARLOS ALVAREZ/GETTY 2017 Investigat­ive journalist Carl Bernstein has penned his second memoir, which details how he fell in love with newspaperi­ng.
 ?? ?? By Carl Bernstein; Henry Holt & Co., 370 pages, $30. ‘Chasing History: A Kid in the Newsroom’
By Carl Bernstein; Henry Holt & Co., 370 pages, $30. ‘Chasing History: A Kid in the Newsroom’

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