‘Times’ Novelist Kills Off One Editor, Skewers Others

"There's been a murder at the Times! Er…Globe!"Photo: Getty Images
Virtually every well-known Times journalist from the last few decades turns up somewhere in the murder mystery, along with a few recognizable figures from outside the paper, including Matt Drudge (a.k.a. Nat Dreck) and Rupert Murdoch (a.k.a. Lester Moloch). As a guessing game, it's almost too easy. Could the square-jawed, email-addicted foreign correspondent-turned-executive editor be anyone other than Bill Keller? Do you need to know that "Jimmy Pomegranate" is a rotund expense-account abuser to guess that he's a stand-in for R.W. "Johnny" Apple? And whoever could be the inspiration for the hyper-aggressive middle-aged female reporter known for big-footing others' stories and getting excessively intimate with the powerful men she covers?
The book starts out with the murder of former standards editor Allan M. Siegal, who is called Theodore S. Ratnoff (the Times is also rechristened as the Globe). Siegal himself said he "loved" the book and his own disastrous end. "I think it was riotously funny," he told Bercovici. We can't wait to see whether everybody else, who doesn't have the luck to get killed off in the first few pages, finds it so hilarious.
'NY Times' Editor Murdered! (in Fiction) [Portfolio]

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