In 1993, Conrad Black was the proprietor of London's Daily Telegraph and the head of one of the world's largest newspaper groups. In 2004, however, he was accused of fraud and fired as chairman of Hollinger. In A Matter of Principle, Black describes his indictment, four-month trial, partial conviction, imprisonment and largely successful appeal. Black writes without reserve about the prosecutors who mounted a campaign to destroy him and the journalists who presumed he was guilty. Fascinating people fill these pages, from prime ministers and presidents to the social, legal and media elite. Woven throughout are Black's views on big politics, corporate governance and the US justice system. He is candid about highly personal subjects, including his friendships, his faith and his marriage to Barbara Amiel. Above all, Black maintains his innocence and recounts what he describes as the 'fight of and for my life'. A Matter of Principle is a riveting memoir and a scathing account of a flawed justice system.
Conrad Black is a Canadian-born British peer, and former publisher of the London Daily Telegraph, The Spectator, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Jerusalem Post, and founder of Canada's National Post.
He is a columnist and regular contributor to several publications, including National Review Online, The New Criterion, The National Interest, American Greatness, the New York Sun, and the National Post.
As an acclaimed author and biographer, Lord Black has published comprehensive histories of both Canada and the United States, as well as authoritative biographies of Maurice Duplessis, and presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt, Richard Nixon, and Donald Trump.
Lord Black is also a television and radio commentator and a sporadic participant in the current affairs programming of CNN, Fox News, CTV, CBC, BBC, and Radio Canada.
Oh Conrad. First off, I'm definitely a fan, and I do indeed think that the whole debacle he had to endure was pure nonsense. In this book, Conrad spells out every detail, from the supposed infractions to his time in jail while awaiting a verdict on appeal (and eventually from the US Supreme Court). I'm pretty sure that a normal person could write this book in 200 or so pages, but it IS Conrad, so of course it's several hundred pages of very fine detail. I quite enjoyed it (again I'm really biased on this subject), however if you have zero interest in business, Conrad, or courtroom drama, this is probably not the book for you.
As a side note, if you want to become highly hubristic in your regularly occurring syntax , you will definitely pick up some pretty awesome words in this little tome.
I figured Lord Black would mount a steadfast (if self-interested) defence of his actions. I had no idea how utterly convincing he would be and how thoroughly he would demolish his opponents.
Outstanding. Black provides a lot of detail about the transactions that formed the basis for the government prosecution and does a masterful job of laying out the defenses that allowed him to beat all but two of the charges. Prosecutor Fitzgerald and Overseer Breeden should be investigated and punished for their extreme abuse of their roles and particularly Breeden who pocketed millions by draining Hollinger of its assets. I am a big fan of Lord Black as a person and as a writer. The two remaining charges that caused his imprisonment are hard to believe and the government should be ashamed. The appendix to this book includes a lot of good information and analysis about what's wrong with the US Judicial system.
Hooray for you Lord Black. I can't wait to read your current project book about the American founders.
As Conrad Black tells it, the basic story is Ayn Randian (a creator of value brung low by parasites in and outside the government). It's not entirely to his credit that I still don't have a particularly good sense of what exactly he was supposed to have done wrong, but possibly that's due to the complexity or weakness of the case. I read it for his angry and contemptuous descriptions of his enemies, which were quite excellent. I felt quite sorry for him by the end, although his tribulations, viewed as a narrative, became pretty monotonous.
I will stipulate at the outset that the Chicago "trial" of Conrad Black, as Mark Steyn documented for Maclean's magazine, was a farce of the first order with a vicious outcome for Black. That said, this memoir of Black's, largely devoted to the trial and jailtime, is, in places, a touch too bombastic and a touch too Baroque in some of its quite understandable and thunderous denunciations. It also lags in a few places from rather tedious legal minutia. But it is nonetheless an insightful study into a gross miscarriage of "justice."
Enjoyed it. Typical Conrad writing (you need a dictionary).
It's unbelievable (still) that he was prosecuted. I wish him the best. I hope he gets the remaining two convictions overturned. They're bogus. Unbelievable. The man essentially lost a decade of his life. A pox on all who attacked him.
A wonderful blow-by-blow account of Conrad Black's trials in the American justice system -- and a harsh judgement of how frayed and decayed that system has become. As always, amazingly written.
One of the most eloquent and infamous writers I've recently had the pleasure of reading, though not agreeing with his policy decisions, he is a crafty chap.