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JOURNALISTS BOOKS
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Roy Attaway. By The Lyons Press.
The regular list price is $18.95.
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1 comments about Home in the Tall Marsh Grass.
- Kirkus gave the only negative review of this book. Why quote it? Are we in the business of selling books or not? See Barnes and Nobles' page for an excerpt from Publishers Weekly.
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Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Harry Turner. By Daniel & Daniel Publishers.
The regular list price is $18.95.
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No comments about Dear Frank: A Father Remembers.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Bob Broeg. By Sagamore Publishing.
The regular list price is $22.95.
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No comments about Bob Broeg: Memories of a Hall of Fame Sportswriter.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Ronald Aronson. By Universitat de Valencia.
The regular list price is $104.00.
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No comments about Camus y Sartre.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by MARY ANN ANDERSON. By Mercer University Press.
The regular list price is $20.00.
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No comments about AIN'T NOTHING SWEETER THAN.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Max Brown. By Rosenberg.
Sells new for $29.95.
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No comments about Charmian And George: The Marriage of George Johnston And Charmian Clift.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Anonymous. By Kessinger Publishing, LLC.
The regular list price is $16.95.
Sells new for $10.12.
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No comments about The San Francisco Chronicle And Its History: The Story Of Its Foundation, The Struggles Of Its Early Life And Its Well Earned Successes.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by A. C. Greene. By Bright Sky Press.
The regular list price is $24.95.
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No comments about Chance Encounters: True Stories of Unforeseen Meetings, with Unanticipated Results.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Gale Reference Team. By Thomson Gale.
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No comments about A legacy of journalistic scrutiny.(EDITORIALS)(Obituary): An article from: National Catholic Reporter.
Posted in Journalists (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Alan Feuer. By Counterpoint.
The regular list price is $24.00.
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5 comments about Over There: From The Bronx to Baghdad.
- This is nothing but poorly written drivel. A friend in publishing gave it to me. I am so glad I didn't pay for it. Amateur writing coupled with a huge ego. Bleah.
- Due to the DOD's brilliant policy of "embedding" reporters, there have been very few books written by reporters discussing there view of the war in Iraq. (Where are you David Halberstam?)I was glad to see that Mr. Feuer was brave enough to write about his experience covering the war. Mr. Feuer's book is a classic fish out of water story. He writes an amusing, sarcastic and insightful book about his experience. His book does a great job capturing "T.R's" feelings as he unexpectedly finds himself in the action in Jordan and Iraq. If you are looking for a book that discusses the failures of journalists to adequately cover the war, this isn't the book for you. If you are looking for a great story about one man's journey into a confusing and awful situation, then buy this book.
- "Three journalists have died in Baghdad. . . American troops are killing journalists in a profoundly foreign country, under cover of a war being fought for savage, greed-crazed reasons that most of them couldn't explain or even understand."
This is a quote from the late "Gonzo Journalist" Hunter Thompson, and Alan Feuer's book captures the same sentiments. A reporter is nothing more than a voyeur, Thompson has said repeatedly, and in this New York Times reporter's case, he has peeped on the underworld of the Bronx Mafia by eavesdropping in Cafes on Arthur Avenue and peeped into the shanty tents of the homeless camped out under the Throgs Neck Bridge. Then he is sent to Bagdad - and thrust into the chaos and confusion of a war he barely understands himself. "Over There," is not a book about the ill-named "Operation Iraqi Freedom" because the author (TR) admittedly does not spend enough time in Iraq to label himself a war correspondent. It is instead a book about a journalist who is parachuted into a gritty warzone and finds himself confronting the same greedy motives he has found covering the mob, dirty CEOs, and hardscrabble, down-on-their luck thieves, back in NYC. It is also a look at the politics of the world's most respected paper and may prompt some high-brow readers who sniff they "only read the Times" to take the hardscrabble reporting of other newspapers just as seriously, if not more so.
- This author is obviously enamored with Hemingwayesque prose, but unfortunately it comes off in a sophomoric and self-absorbed way. I wish that he had more to say about the war and less to say about himself.
- I found it very interesting to read this book! I have to say, I was delighted in his writing style, it made me laugh and think, and if he writes another book, I will buy it because I liked his style. It was very interesting to read a reporter write about what he (as a reporter) thought and did, especially in mid-war. How often do we get first hand accounts of the ins and outs of being a reporter? I had no idea how much lag time they suffered, nor had I thought about how intrusive the media can be, with the goal of telling a story to the world.I liked it!
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Home in the Tall Marsh Grass
Dear Frank: A Father Remembers
Bob Broeg: Memories of a Hall of Fame Sportswriter
Camus y Sartre
AIN'T NOTHING SWEETER THAN
Charmian And George: The Marriage of George Johnston And Charmian Clift
The San Francisco Chronicle And Its History: The Story Of Its Foundation, The Struggles Of Its Early Life And Its Well Earned Successes
Chance Encounters: True Stories of Unforeseen Meetings, with Unanticipated Results
A legacy of journalistic scrutiny.(EDITORIALS)(Obituary): An article from: National Catholic Reporter
Over There: From The Bronx to Baghdad
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