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the Financial Times and Economist
This page covers the Financial
Times and Economist groups, in which Pearson
has a predominant stake.
the FT
The
Financial Times: A Centenary History (London: Viking
88) by David Kynaston is the official history of the Pearson-controlled
London financial paper, which owns half of The Economist
group.
Andrew Boyle's acidulous Poor Dear Brendan: The Quest
For Brendan Bracken (London: Hutchinson 74) leaves
little sense of how the 'bounder' and supposed Churchill
love-child could have become chair of both the Economist
and the Financial Times. Bracken's more perceptively
analysed in the spritzy Eminent Churchillians by
Andrew Roberts (London: Phoenix 95) and - with less verve
- in Charles Lysaght's Brendan Bracken (London:
Allen Lane 79), which alas omits Claud Cockburn's sniff
that Bracken was "a man so devious, even his natural
hair looked like a wig".
Richard Cockett edited My Dear Max: The Letters of
Brendan Bracken to Lord Beaverbrook 1925-58 (London:
Rainbow 90). The milieu's discussed in the second volume
of Stephen Koss' exemplary The Rise & Fall of the
Political Press in Britain (London: Hamish Hamilton
84).
For Pearson see the separate profile
on this site.
Economist
The Economist Group, owned by
the Financial Times
and Pearson,
encompasses The Economist
- still somewhat quaintly described as a weekly newspaper
- and a growing range of specialist publications and information
research services.
The outstanding study of the corporate flagship is Ruth
Edwards' The Pursuit of Reason: The Economist, 1843-1993
(London: Hamish Hamilton 93).
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