Is 'Catch And Kill' Worth Reading?

2026-03-11 10:32:44 310

4 Answers

Zane
Zane
2026-03-13 15:23:01
Ron Farrow's 'Catch and Kill' hit me like a freight train—I devoured it in two sleepless nights. The way it blends investigative journalism with the tension of a spy thriller still gives me chills. It’s not just about Weinstein; it’s about the systems that protect predators, and Farrow’s own paranoia (bugged laptops, shadowy figures) reads like something out of 'The Parallax View'.

What stuck with me most were the voices of the survivors—their raw testimonies woven into the narrative without sensationalism. That said, if you’re burned out on true crime or expecting a traditional memoir, the procedural details might feel heavy. But for anyone who cares about media ethics or #MeToo, it’s essential reading. I still recommend it to friends with the disclaimer: 'Stock up on snacks—you won’t put it down.'
Kyle
Kyle
2026-03-14 16:57:42
Three things make this book unforgettable: the parking garage meetups with sources, the NBC legal team’s absurd redactions (whole pages blacked out!), and Rose McGowan’s fiery vulnerability. Farrow could’ve made himself the hero, but instead he spotlights the women who risked everything.

It’s not an easy read—there are moments I had to walk away and scream into a pillow—but that’s the point. The section where he describes hearing his own phone being tapped still lives rent-free in my head. If you enjoyed 'She Said', this is the darker, grittier companion piece.
Violet
Violet
2026-03-16 13:38:07
I picked up 'Catch and Kill' expecting dry journalism—boy, was I wrong. The way Farrow structures the narrative like a cat-and-mouse game had me hooked. That scene where he buries evidence in his backyard? Pure cinematic tension. My book club debated for hours whether this qualifies as true crime or something entirely new. Either way, it’s masterful storytelling that makes corporate corruption feel personal.
Ivy
Ivy
2026-03-17 21:53:53
I surprised myself by how much I loved 'Catch and Kill'. Farrow’s writing cuts through the noise—no flowery prose, just relentless momentum. The audiobook version is especially gripping; hearing his frustration when networks kill the story makes it visceral.

It does get dense with names and timelines, so I kept my phone handy to look up key players. But that’s part of its power: showing how deliberately complex these cover-ups are. Minor gripe? I wish there’d been more about the whistleblowers’ lives post-scandal. Still, worth every penny—it changed how I view 'off-the-record' conversations forever.
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