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Mavericks: Canadian Rebels, Renegades and Antiheroes

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Pt. 1. Business. A hitchhiker's guide to the mind of Conrad Black; Sir George Simpson: the birchbark Napoleon; The world according to Garth; Sir Herbert Holt: the tycoon who tried to buy Canada; The murder of Harry Oakes: why nobody cried; Peter Nygard and his twenty-five best naked friends; My adventures in Bronfman country; Victor Rice: how to fire fifty-two thousand workers; Robert Campeau caught the biggest fish; Nelson Skalbania: not a poor country in the Balkans; K.C. Irving: how could he top the list?; The Eatons: spoiled kids who destroyed an empire; Lord Strathcona: Lord of all he surveyed -- and then some; Bud McDougald: the tycoon who never gave an interview; The day Confederation Life went bust.

Pt. 2. Politics. Tom d'Aquino: the man who sold the farm ; Brian Mulroney: wooing New York's millions; René Lévesque: meeting the Wall Street cowboys; Kim Campbell: ah, we hardly knew ye; Louis Riel: the mad rebel who was our founding father; Jack Pickersgill: "Sailor Jack" and the politics of patronage ; Bill Vander Zalm: the kamikaze premier; Lucien Bouchard: revolution east ; David Radler: the one who got away; Kinky Friedman: the bad-ass country singer; John Diefenbaker: renegade out of power.

377 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2010

28 people want to read

About the author

Peter C. Newman

56 books27 followers
Peter Charles Newman (born Peta Karel Neuman), CC, journalist, author, newspaper and magazine editor (born 10 May 1929 in Vienna, Austria; died 7 September 2023 in Belleville, ON). Peter C. Newman was one of Canada’s most prominent journalists, biographers and non-fiction authors. After starting out with the Financial Post, he became editor-in-chief of both the Toronto Star and Maclean’s. His 35 books, which have collectively sold more than two million copies, helped make political reporting and business journalism more personalized and evocative. His no-holds-barred, insiders-tell-all accounts of Canada’s business and political elites earned him a reputation as Canada’s “most cussed and discussed” journalist. A recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees, Newman was elected to the Canadian News Hall of Fame in 1992. He was made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1978 and a Companion in 1990.

Early Life and Education

Originally named Peta Karel Neuman by his secularized Jewish parents, Peter C. Newman grew up in the Czech town of Breclav, where his father ran a large sugar beet refinery. As Newman wrote in 2018, “I lived the charmed life of a little rich boy in Moravia, Czechoslovakia — until age nine, that is, when the world as I knew it vanished.” Fleeing the Nazis, his family came to Canada as refugees in 1940.

Newman initially attended Hillfield School in Hamilton, Ontario, a prep school for the Royal Military College of Canada. But, envisaging a business career for his son, Newman's father, Oscar, enrolled him as a “war guest” boarder at Upper Canada College in 1944. There he met future members of the Canadian establishment whose lives he would later document.

After graduating, Newman joined the Canadian Navy Reserves. He was a reservist for decades and eventually reached the rank of captain. For many years, he was rarely seen in public without his signature black sailor cap.


Career Highlights

Once he mastered English, Newman began writing, first for the University of Toronto newspaper, then for the Financial Post in 1951. By 1953, he was Montreal editor of the Post. He held the position for three years before returning to Toronto to be assistant editor, then Ottawa columnist, at Maclean's magazine. In 1959, he published Flame of Power: Intimate Profiles of Canada's Greatest Businessmen. It profiles 11 of the first generation of Canada's business magnates. In 1963, Newman published his masterly and popular political chronicle of John Diefenbaker, Renegade in Power: The Diefenbaker Years (1963). According to the Writers’ Trust of Canada, the book “revolutionized Canadian political reporting with its controversial ‘insiders-tell-all’ approach.” Five years later, Newman published a similar but less successful study of Lester Pearson, The Distemper of Our Times (1968).

In 1969, Newman became editor-in-chief at the Toronto Star. During this period, he published some of his best journalism in Home Country: People, Places and Power Politics (1973). He then published popular studies on the lives of those who wielded financial power in the Canadian business establishment. These included his two-volume The Canadian Establishment (1975, 1981), The Bronfman Dynasty (1978; see also Bronfman Family), and The Establishment Man: A Portrait of Power (1982). A third book called Titans: How the New Canadian Establishment Seized Power was added to this series in 1998.

Newman was also editor of Maclean's from 1971 to 1982. He transformed the magazine from a monthly to a weekly news magazine — the first of its kind in Canada — with a Canadian slant on international and national events. In 1982, he resigned to work on a three-volume history of the Hudson's Bay Company.

Honours

Peter C. Newman received the Canadian Journalism Foundation's Lifetime Achievement Award and the Toronto Star's Excellence in Journalism award in 1998. He received a National Newspaper Award and in 1992 he was elected to the Canadia

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
795 reviews15 followers
December 31, 2025
I liked the variety of subjects Newman chose to include in this anthology. It's a collection of mini biographical essays of notable Canadians. I wanted to read what he had to say about Conrad Black and it was one of the standout biographies. Some of the people have faded from the spotlight due to the passage of time, e.g. the Eatons, Victor Rice. It's worth perusing the contents and perhaps selecting one or two of the essays to read.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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