“Auerbach subjects the New York Times to a meticulously
researched analysis of its attitude over the years 1896 to 2016 towards Zionism
and Israel. … Print to Fit leads the reader through Israel’s story along
an unfamiliar route. The New York Times is one of the world’s leading
newspapers. It is regarded as a ‘journal of record.’ For more than 120 years it
has been shaping American opinion. Jerold S Auerbach argues convincingly that,
as far as Zionism and Israel are concerned, the paper has consistently been far
from objective in its editorial policy, has fallen short of its own high
standards, and has consequently failed in its journalistic obligations to the
public.” —Neville Teller, The Jerusalem Report
~Neville Teller
“Jerold Auerbach’s archly titled new study Print to Fit:
The New York Times, Zionism and Israel, 1896–2016 is a well-researched and,
for the most part, damning brief of the Times’s news coverage and editorial
attitudes toward Zionism and Israel for over a century. … Print to Fit
was written well before the Jew-dog cartoon scandal, but it does answer the
question about it with which this review began: How could such an image make it
to the pages of an edition of the New York Times?” —Deborah E. Lipstadt,
the Jewish Review of Books
“There is no denying the basic truth of Jerold Auerbach’s book, which is that the Times has had a fundamental antagonism to Zionism and to Israel from its beginning until this day. His title says it all: instead of printing all the news that is fit to print—as it says so proudly on its front page every day—the Times has often printed the news that fits its ideology.” —Jack Reimer, The Jewish Advocate