![]() ![]() It’s also an unequaled and necessary manual of the fine art of investigative reporting. The book is a delight to read: few journalists have ever been as funny as Mitford, or as gifted at getting around in those dark, cobwebbed corners where modern America fashions its shiny promises. This response validates Jessica Mitford’s observation that prisoners may be cheaper than chimpanzees, or at least the penalties for misusing prisoner test subjects are less onerous. Poison Penmanship collects seventeen of Mitford’s finest pieces-about everything from crummy spas to network-TV censorship-and fills them out with the story of how she got the scoop and, no less fascinating, how the story developed after publication. In her 1973 book, Kind and Usual Punishment, Jessica Mitford said a researcher had confided to her that prisoners are '. Mitford’s diligence, unfailing skepticism, and acid pen made her one of the great chroniclers of the mischief people get up to in the pursuit of profit and the name of good. Leaving England for America, she pursued a career as an investigative reporter and unrepentant gadfly, publicizing not only the misdeeds of, most famously, the funeral business ( The American Way of Death, a bestseller) and the prison business ( Kind and Usual Punishment), but also of writing schools and weight-loss programs. ![]() Jessica Mitford was a member of one of England’s most legendary families (among her sisters were the novelist Nancy Mitford and the current Duchess of Devonshire) and one of the great muckraking journalists of modern times. ![]()
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