David Halberstam 1934-2007

Fond Farewell
- Ingmar Bergman 1918-2007
- Liz Claiborne 1929-2007
- Jerry Falwell 1933-2007
- Steve Fossett 1944-2007
- Robert Goulet 1933-2007
- Merv Griffin 1925-2007
- David Halberstam 1934-2007
- Lady Bird Johnson 1912-2007
- Yolanda King 1955-2007
- Evel Knievel 1938-2007
- Madeleine L'Engle 1918-2007
- Norman Mailer 1923-2007
- Marcel Marceau 1923-2007
- Tammy Faye Messner 1942-2007
- Luciano Pavarotti 1935-2007
- Phil Rizzuto 1917-2007
- Max Roach 1924-2007
- Anita Roddick 1942-2007
- Arthur Schlesinger 1917-2007
- Sidney Sheldon 1917-2007
- Beverly Sills 1929-2007
- Anna Nicole Smith 1967-2007
- Kurt Vonnegut 1922-2007
- Kurt Waldheim 1918-2007
- Bill Walsh 1931-2007
- Boris Yeltsin 1931-2007
If the 20th century was the century of bigness big ideologies, big institutions, big wars then Halberstam was one of its most apt chroniclers. Rather than nibble at history's edges, he sought to report and explain the outsize events and people of his lifetime in massive, fearless tomes. His best-known books, like The Best and the Brightest (about the Vietnam War and the brain trust that got the U.S. mired in it) and The Powers That Be (about America's major media outlets), were analytical, often judgmental looks at the workings of power and its tendency toward hubris.
Halberstam grounded his ambition in the shoe-leather reporting he practiced for the New York Times. He also balanced his weighty works with a string of books on sports. He was killed in a car crash in April on the way to interview legendary quarterback Y.A. Tittle a fitting end for a reporter who never lost his love of the field.










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