“Breaking News” is a captivating book, full of caricature, satire, stereotype, and raucous action. There are twists and turns in the plot that keep the reader guessing. And, best of all, it reveals what we all suspect about the news media; all is not what it appears.
The authors, writer J.D. Rader and news journalist Michael Gudgell have collaborated on a novel that seems to be based on a collection of real life incidents that involves girls, women and the powerful men surrounding them who get caught under the microscope of public interest and frenetic news coverage. Who can forget Jonbenet Ramsey, Chandra Levy, Laci Peterson, or Natalee Holloway? Gudgell was a journalist who covered these stories and much of what he discovered became material for “Breaking News.” The ensuing story is fascinating for its authentic detail and realistic premise.
Veteran television news producer Bill Ramey gets interested in the disappearance of a beautiful young woman and her apparent ties with a sleazy U.S. Senator, Gerald Smith, who has his hometown of Chicago bamboozled with his charisma and who continues to be elected despite controversy in his private life. A young and talented research assistant continues to uncover more information connecting the missing woman to the Senator and, in the process of working with the researcher, Ramey discovers that another young woman turns up missing with the same ties to Smith. The race is on between TV networks, reporters, and media bigwigs to reveal the Senator’s involvement. The manipulations and motives behind the scramble are carefully outlined by the authors, giving readers an authentic inside look at the broken news system from which we all currently suffer.
Things get ugly when a Russian gun dealer and his thugs get involved, spreading beatings, maiming, and murder around in a frantic effort to maintain their influence in high governmental circles. The Senator, caught in the middle, is slowly drawn deeper into his nasty world of criminal behavior. Then Ramsey discovers an ugly truth about some of the allegations against the Senator and his world also collapses into disgrace and disrespect.
This book will engulf the reader in a world of deceit and misdirection on the part of the media and brutality and death from the bad actors in the Senator’s murky world. It is satirical in its bright light focus, humorous in some of its insight, and entertaining in its presentation. I suggest you don’t miss it.