Interviews With History and Power
By: Oriana Fallaci
-
Rs 3,095.00
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A posthumous compilation of this award-winning and best-selling writer
and journalist s seminal, historic interviews. Oriana Fallaci was
granted access to countless world leaders and politicians throughout her
remarkable career. Considering herself a writer rather than a
journalist, she was never shy about sharing her opinions of her
interview subjects. Her most memorable interviews some translated into
English for the first time appear in this collection, including those
with Ariel Sharon, Yassir Arafat, the former Shah of Iran, Lech Walesa,
the Dalai Lama, Robert Kennedy, and many others. Also featured is the
famous 1972 interview in which she succeeded in getting Henry Kissinger
to call Vietnam a "useless war" and to describe himself as "a cowboy."
To this day he calls the Fallaci interview "the most disastrous
conversation I ever had with the press."
Publication Date:
05/04/2016
Number of Pages::
280
Binding:
Hard Back
ISBN:
9780789331328
Categories:
Book | |
What's in the Box? | 1 x Interviews With History and Power - |
Publisher Date:
05/04/2016
Number of Pages::
280
Binding:
Hard Back
ISBN:
9780789331328
Categories:
A posthumous compilation of this award-winning and best-selling writer
and journalist s seminal, historic interviews. Oriana Fallaci was
granted access to countless world leaders and politicians throughout her
remarkable career. Considering herself a writer rather than a
journalist, she was never shy about sharing her opinions of her
interview subjects. Her most memorable interviews some translated into
English for the first time appear in this collection, including those
with Ariel Sharon, Yassir Arafat, the former Shah of Iran, Lech Walesa,
the Dalai Lama, Robert Kennedy, and many others. Also featured is the
famous 1972 interview in which she succeeded in getting Henry Kissinger
to call Vietnam a "useless war" and to describe himself as "a cowboy."
To this day he calls the Fallaci interview "the most disastrous
conversation I ever had with the press."