Alexander Larman 

In brief: The Newsmongers; The Night in Venice; Vital Organs – review

An informed history of tabloid journalism; an atmospheric Edwardian-era mystery set in Italy; and a riotous study of famous people’s body parts
  
  

Terry Kirby’s The Newsmongers studies everyone from Daniel Defoe to Rupert Murdoch
Terry Kirby’s The Newsmongers studies everyone from Daniel Defoe to Rupert Murdoch.
Photograph: Sean Gladwell/Getty Images

The Newsmongers: A History of Tabloid Journalism

Terry Kirby
Reaktion, £20, pp392

The average Observer reader might be unfamiliar with contemporary tabloid newspapers, but in this informative – if overlong – survey of that subsection of journalism, Terry Kirby studies everyone from Daniel Defoe to Rupert Murdoch, ruthlessly dissecting their venality and opportunism. He also, in the interests of balance, salutes them when they dared to do something their competition would have balked at, notably the Daily Mail’s famously ballsy “Murderers” front page headline on the killing of Stephen Lawrence. Few will end this book thinking better of tabloids, but it’s sometimes hard not to admire their – and their proprietors’ – chutzpah.

The Night in Venice

AJ Martin
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £22, pp320

From Thomas Mann to Daphne du Maurier, Venice has always been fertile territory for authors. AJ Martin – the alter ego of the excellent Andrew Martin – here serves up an immensely readable addition to the panoply. The story of an overimaginative 14-year old orphan, Monica, who heads to Italy with her overbearing guardian, Rose Driscoll, only to fear that she has accidentally killed her and blotted out all memory of doing so, is rich in atmospheric dread, with a fine sense of both Edwardian repression and the mournful mysteries of Venice.

Vital Organs: A History of the World’s Most Famous Body Parts

Suzie Edge
Wildfire, £12.99, pp320 (paperback)

Suzie Edge’s highly enjoyable and original history book focuses on an overlooked aspect of biography: the various body parts of the great, good and nefarious. Over the course of Vital Organs’s often riotous pages, Edge examines everything from Adolf Hitler’s missing testicle (said, of course, to reside in the Albert Hall) to Fanny Burney’s severed breast, with her primitive, anaesthetic-free mastectomy described in detail to her sister in a vivid and still horrifying letter. Equal parts well-researched history and accessible science treatise, this is fascinating stuff, with Edge a marvellously informed guide.

• To order The Newsmongers, The Night in Venice or Vital Organs go to guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

 

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