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Sam Bourne

Sam Bourne
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Sam Bourne

Sam Bourne is a pseudonym for the award-winning journalist and broadcaster Jonathan Freedland. He writes weekly columns in both the Guardian and the London Evening Standard, as well as a monthly piece for the Jewish Chronicle. He also presents BBC Radio 4's contemporary history series, The Long View. The author of Jacob's Gift and Bring Home the Revolution, Freedland, named by the Financial Times as one of the world's most influential commentators, lives in London.

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    1. Sam Bourne: The Righteous Men
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The Righteous Men
Jan 07, 2010
Jun 27, 2009
The Righteous Men is now available in eAudio
Nov 10, 2008
The Righteous Men will be released on August 22, 2006 in eAudio
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Authors on the Web

Guardian.co.uk, March 30, 2012
...result of laziness that hopes to avoid detection but of deliberate policy. Why do three current thrillers, by Sam Bourne, Michael Dobbs and Jo Nesbo, all feature Tiny Men, though not necessarily walking into the distance? Probably because that's the...
The Independent, March 12, 2012
...hunt for his family begins to seem -- perhaps -- less important than the fate of two continents. Sam Bourne is, in fact, the journalist Jonathan Freedland, whose columns in the pages of the Guardian demonstrate that he is a believer in Scott Fitzgerald's...
Cherwell Newspaper, March 5, 2012
...Ben McEvoy is disappointed by Sam Bourne's recent thriller Why does Jonathan Freedland use a pseudonym if he declares his real name and photo on the back cover? More to the point, why did he...
Stourbridge News, March 3, 2012
...footnotes add that extra touch to Poppy's playful wit. 5/10 (Review by Nilima Dey Sarker) Pantheon by Sam Bourne is published in hardback by HarperCollins, priced £12.99. Available now. Guardian journalist Jonathan Freedland has a new thriller released...
The Oxford Student, March 3, 2012
...at one end and, at the other end, me”. This is far from the case; under his pseudonym Sam Bourne Freedland has published five novels and sold nearly two million copies. His latest novel, Pantheon, follows the adventures of James Zennor, a troubled...
Huffington Post UK, February 17, 2012
...ve ever made things up - but rather a confession that, as a novelist writing under the name Sam Bourne, I've had to stick to the facts much more rigorously than I'd ever have expected. I found that out early. Readers who could accept the wildest...
Huffington Post UK, February 17, 2012
...ve ever made things up - but rather a confession that, as a novelist writing under the name Sam Bourne, I've had to stick to the facts much more rigorously than I'd ever have expected. More...
Halesowen News, March 3, 2012
...footnotes add that extra touch to Poppy's playful wit. 5/10 (Review by Nilima Dey Sarker) Pantheon by Sam Bourne is published in hardback by HarperCollins, priced £12.99. Available now. Guardian journalist Jonathan Freedland has a new thriller released...
Oxford Times, March 2, 2012
...of human. The theory is explored in an admittedly fictional tale but the author, who used his pseudonym Sam Bourne, insists that story is “rooted in extraordinary facts”, arguing that serious questions remain to be answered about the Oxford-Yale...
This is Oxfordshire, March 2, 2012
...of human. The theory is explored in an admittedly fictional tale but the author, who used his pseudonym Sam Bourne, insists that story is “rooted in extraordinary facts”, arguing that serious questions remain to be answered about the Oxford-Yale...
Oxford Mail, March 2, 2012
...of human. The theory is explored in an admittedly fictional tale but the author, who used his pseudonym Sam Bourne, insists that story is “rooted in extraordinary facts”, arguing that serious questions remain to be answered about the Oxford-Yale...
Oxford Times, March 2, 2012
...of human. The theory is explored in an admittedly fictional tale but the author, who used his pseudonym Sam Bourne, insists that story is “rooted in extraordinary facts”, arguing that serious questions remain to be answered about the Oxford-Yale...
This is Oxfordshire, March 2, 2012
...of human. The theory is explored in an admittedly fictional tale but the author, who used his pseudonym Sam Bourne, insists that story is “rooted in extraordinary facts”, arguing that serious questions remain to be answered about the Oxford-Yale...
TheStar.com.my, March 1, 2012
...a period after World War II when American scientists explored Adolf Hitlers horrific theories about eugenics. Pantheon Author: Sam Bourne Publisher: HarperCollins, 416 pages ONE autumn afternoon in the mid-1960s, Ron Rosenbaum, a recently arrived...