Published 09/11/2023 | Hardback,
Description:
Charles Wheeler, the BBC’s longest-serving foreign correspondent, was one of Britain’s greatest news reporters. For more than four decades, he reported for radio and television from most of the world’s trouble spots. Present at many of the key episodes of the twentieth century, he had – as a BBC manager noted after the shooting of George Wallace, Presidential candidate and Governor of Alabama, on 15 May 1972, ‘a knack of being in the right place at the right time’. It was typical of Charles that he ran towards the sound of the gunshot while the crowd was running in the opposite direction.
Wheeler’s investigative skill and sense of judgement made him one of the most authoritative reporters of his generation. But what was it like to have been witness to the events that shaped our modern world? In this book – part memoir, part history, part reflection – his daughter, Shirin Wheeler, examines her father’s journalistic legacy and brings her personal knowledge to bear on the project. She will tell the story of her father: a patient listener and forensic interrogator who was driven by curiosity and passion to report and expose injustice, and above all to give a voice to people ignored or unheard by many.

The Cat in the Hat
The Porpoise
Happy Moments
If It Bleeds
The Eye of the World
Diary of A Somebody
Gift Wrapping
Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine
Dear Mrs Bird
Could You Survive Midsomer? : Can you avoid a bizarre death in England's most dangerous county?
The Pigeon Tunnel
King of the Sky
Bone China : A gripping and atmospheric gothic thriller
How We Met


