Richard West (journalist)

Richard West (18 July 1930 – 25 April 2015) was a British journalist and author best known for his reporting of the Vietnam War and Yugoslavia.[1]

Born in London, West attended Marlborough College before his national service spell in Trieste awakened a lifelong interest in Yugoslavia. Described as 'one of the finest foreign correspondents of the 20th century' [2]his career covered the span of the Cold War in most of its theatres.

Starting off his journalistic career at the Manchester Guardian, West became a foreign correspondent in Yugoslavia, Africa, Central America and Indochina. Described as the 'paragon of the independent journalist for his generation', [3] he would spend much of the next two decades in Vietnam, Africa and eastern Europe, where he was codenamned Agent Friday by Communist Poland's secret police. Among his books are The Making of the Prime Minister (with Anthony Howard),[4] An English Journey (1981) and Tito and the Rise and Fall of Yugoslavia (1995).[5]

He was the grandson of the classics scholar Walter Leaf, and was married to the Irish journalist Mary Kenny. His sons, Patrick West and Ed West, are both journalists, and Richard was the first cousin of the actor Timothy West.

Bibliography

Books

References

  1. "Richard West, writer - obituary". Telegraph.co.uk. 26 April 2015.
  2. http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2015/04/the-passing-of-a-magnificent-contrarian/
  3. http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/apr/27/richard-west
  4. Seldon, Anthony; Pappworth, Joanna (1983). By word of mouth: "élite" oral history. Methuen. p. 169. ISBN 0-416-33020-7.
  5. Naimark, Norman; Case, Holly (2003). Yugoslavia and its historians: understanding the Balkan wars of the 1990s. Stanford University Press. p. 227. ISBN 0-8047-4594-3.