Bonfire of the Murdochs: How the Epic Fight to Control the Last Great Media Dynasty Broke a Family—and the World
Gabriel Sherman. Simon & Schuster, $29 (256p) ISBN 978-1-9821-6741-7
Journalist Sherman (The Loudest Voice in the Room) delves in this juicy melodrama into the caustic, decades-long family feud over the inheritance of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire. The account opens with Rupert’s son Lachlan’s 2023 move to oust his siblings—James, Liz, and their older half sister Prudence—from the family trust. Backtracking from there, Sherman traces Murdoch’s rise, from the inheritance of his own father’s Australian newspaper business through his slew of tabloid purchases in Britain and America. Murdoch’s success, the author shows, is owed to both a taste for sensationalism and a cold-blooded ruthlessness, the latter of which bleeds into his personal life, particularly via his transactional bond with his children, whom he “pit[s]... against one another” and for whom deal-making is the only way to gain their father’s attention. Indeed, the dizzying amount of sales and acquisitions can bog down the narrative’s pace, though it serves well to express the extent to which Murdoch manipulates his children for his own gain, including telling Liz that she was “his preferred successor” during his purchase of her successful TV production company only to stop talking to her once the paperwork was signed. The saga reads like a real-life Succession, a comparison even the family can see, as evidenced by their paranoia about possible leaks to the show’s writers. Readers will be riveted by this merciless battle for dynastic dominance. (Feb.)
Details
Reviewed on: 12/02/2025
Genre: Nonfiction
Downloadable Audio - 978-1-6681-0750-8

