Scandal: A Scurrilous History of GossipNewspaper and magazine gossip is a potent and sulphurous brew - much derided and much devoured - that long ago became part of the daily diet of millions. The raw ingredients are scandal, rumour, glamour and scurrility, and the best is shot through with (preferably illicit) sex, disclosure and danger. How and why has this happened, and where will this obsession lead us? |
From inside the book
Try this search over all volumes: Fitzroy Maclean
Results 1-0 of 0
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Puffs Parsons and Paragraphs | 11 |
The Bubble of the Rabble | 31 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
affair American appeared Balfour Beaverbrook became Bertie Beverley Nichols Britain Castlerosse celebrity century Charles circle complained Confidential court culture Daily Express Daily Mirror Defoe Dempster divorce Donegall Driberg Drudge Duchess early editor Edmund Yates Evelyn Waugh Fleet Street friends George gossip column gossip writer Henry Hollywood House Ibid James Jeremy Thorpe John journalism journalist King knew Lady Blessington Lady Colin later launched letter libel Lillie Langtry literary lives Lockhart London Londoner's Diary Lord magazine marriage married Morning Post Muggeridge Nancy Mitford newspaper Nichols Nigel Dempster papers paragraphs party Peter Bessell political Prince of Wales Princess printed Profumo published Queen Quoted readers reported Review royal rumours scurrilous sexual Simpson social society stars story Sunday tabloid Thorpe tittle-tattle Tom Driberg Town trial Vanity Fair Victorian Walter Winchell Waugh week weekly wife William Hickey Winchell's Winn woman women World wrote Yates York young