The Kent State University Press - 307 Lowry Hall - Kent, Ohio - 44242
Featured books button Search our catalog button Browse by title button Browse by author button Browse by subject button How to order button
Home button
About Us button
Events button
Books button
Series button
Poetry button
Journals button
Links button
Contact Us button
Shopping Cart button
O'Donnell cover art

Front-Page Girl

by Doris O'Donnell


2006, 259 pp
ISBN 0-87338-846-1

Add this book to your cart

Cloth, $22.95

courtesy of our partner, Atlas Books
Call (419) 281-1802 to order by phone.



A memoir brimming with local flavor and political intrigue

Prior to World War II, women were a rarity in the newsrooms of daily papers throughout the country. The assignments given to those few who graced the profession reflected the newspaper culture of the time—society, fashion, and school news. Doris O’Donnell proved the exception. While she began her journalism career with those routine tasks, in short order she broke those barriers and assumed more challenging duties of investigative reporting and covering the crime beat.

Her 58-year career as a news reporter included the prestigious assignments of covering such notable events as the assassinations of President John Kennedy, Senator Bobby Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr.; the inner-city riots in Cleveland and other major cities during the summer of 1966; Ted Kennedy’s Chappaquiddick incident; and the Sam Sheppard murder case. She also traveled with the Cleveland Indians baseball team (the Cleveland Sports Writers voted her out of the all-male press box in Baltimore, D.C., and Boston), lived with an African American family on Cleveland’s east side and wrote a three-week series about their daily lives, and traveled to the Soviet Union in 1957 where she reported on the intimate lives of the average Russian.

In Front-Page Girl, O’Donnell regales the reader with her tales of Cleveland’s mobsters, riots, murders, and corruption and delves into the murkiness of local, national, and global politics. This engaging memoir doubles as an important glimpse into the stories behind the headlines and as a treasure trove of Cleveland history.

Doris O’Donnell retired from the newspaper business in 1995. She currently lives in Ohio.


 

Link to Kent State's Home Page