A Mother Jones Best Book of 2009, A Bomb in Every Issue uncovers the
largely untold story of Ramparts magazine, the spectacular San
Francisco muckraker that captured the zeitgeist of the '60s and
repeatedly scooped the New York Times, changing American journalism
forever.
Launched in 1962 as a Catholic literary quarterly, Ramparts quickly
transformed into a radical slick, winning a George Polk Award in 1967
for its explosive revival of the great muckraking tradition. According
to the Los Angeles Times, the magazine not only blew the cover off the
biggest stories of the era, it also helped set the ideological agenda
for its core demographic, the New Left, and forced the mainstream press
to follow its lead.
Ramparts' list of contributors--including Noam Chomsky, César Chávez,
Seymour Hersh, Angela Davis, and Susan Sontag--formed a who's who of the
American left. Although Ramparts folded for good in 1975, former
staffers founded Rolling Stone and Mother Jones and include some of
the most illustrious names in journalism (names like Robert Scheer, Jann
Wenner, and Warren Hinckle), and Ramparts remains an inspiration to
investigative journalists today.