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JOURNALISTS BOOKS
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Pat Carney. By Key Porter Books.
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No comments about Trade Secrets.
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Sprague Vonier. By Gareth Stevens Pub.
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No comments about Edward R. Murrow: His Courage and Ideals Set the Standard for Broadcast Journalism (People Who Have Helped the World).
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Marcia Schneider. By CPI Group.
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No comments about First Woman of the News (Famous Firsts Series/87003821).
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by William Leonard. By Putnam Adult.
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No comments about In the Storm of the Eye.
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
By Nelson-Hall Company.
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No comments about The Typewriter Guerrillas: Closeups of 20 Top Investigative Reporters.
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by William B Lipphard. By Judson Press.
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No comments about Fifty years an editor.
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Robert Hardy Andrews. By Little, Brown and COmpany.
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No comments about A Corner of Chicago.
Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Chuck Woodbury. By William Morrow & Co.
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1 comments about The Best from Out West.
- Author Woodbury has selected some of his best writing, taken from his quarterly tabloid, "Out West." Woodbury roams the blue highways and small towns of the Western USA, interviewing those he meets and writing about the places he visits. He has a tremendous sensibility about where to go (and perhaps more importantly, when to stay put), and a newsman's nose for a story. The stories that he digs up are not so much daily news, as people and places that are exemplative of small-town life, forgotten times, and the general oddities that make the world more interesting than yet another faceless mall (or Starbucks or McDonald's).
Woodbury delights in his subjects, and in many ways, is himself the most interesting subject of his writing. His reactions and feelings (especially his musings about being a wandering journalist) are a cross between reporting and diary-writing, creating a highly engrossing blend. Among the selection in this book are stories of Bill, Wyoming (population 1), eating a plate of cow brains, waging war on chipmunks over Cheezits, sampling potato ice cream and visiting museums and attractions such as Jake the Alligator Man and Death Valley. Amazon may be able to find you a copy of this out-of-print gem, or you can get a copy through Woodbury's web-site, www.outwestnewspaper.com.
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Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Joe Woodward. By iUniverse, Inc..
The regular list price is $13.95.
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4 comments about Small Matters: A Year in Writing.
- This book is so much fun to read! The chapters are quick and easy to get into. They offer insights into suburban life through an interseting use of language. I particularly enjoyed the stories at the end about the author's childhood. This book has the kind of writing that you remember like Anne Lamott or Anna Quindlen.
- Small Matters , A Year in Writing is a great collection of columns and memoirs about growing up and living in Southern California. The author uses great language to describe his outlook on interesting events. A must read that definetly deserves to be read.
- From the photograph on the cover of this important little book - a small child standing by his RadioFlyer reaching for a California orange on his backyard tree - to the collection of weekly newspaper columns to the final musings of memoirs, author Joe Woodward enters an arena of writing that immediately thrusts him into the company of Mark Twain, Jack Smith, Susan Sontag and other names which will doubtless surface to other readers as they slowly enjoy the thoughts of a quiet Everyman.
Joe Woodward (again, notice this is not a "Joseph" Woodward who addresses us) writes from his home in Claremont, California, words gleaned from a weekly column in the LA Times sectional newspaper for his area, about the kinds of issues that folks in the homier locations outside the city gates of the megapolis of Los Angeles face and incorporate into their modus operandi of daily living. Woodward feeds the fires of public resentment about racial profiling accusations of the protectors of the city, about the noise from the freeway that burrows into the calm sought in the periphery of the city, allows his own emotions to surface and share about the extended super market strike that affected both workers and shoppers alike. These things may sound like 'small matters' in the milieu of Iraq and tsunami and train derailments/drive-by shootings/suicide bombers etc. But if you read his core responses carefully, you will find that Woodward uses these 'minor issues' of his columns to carefully mold his readers' thoughts as to what things in our lives are important. These issues, while not equal to the major events internationally, these issues do 'matter': these issues reflect how the individual relates to his immediate environment and that immediacy that shapes global coexistence.
Alert! This is not just a series of crises that afflict one suburban location: for every bit of anger or sadness there is a partner celebration of the little things (other small matters) that make life joyous. Woodward knows how to celebrate as well as how to tackle human foibles and corporate emulsification. To this reader he uses his Claremont focus as a microcosm: lift your eyes from the pages and glance over the newspaper and the metaphors become obvious.
Small towns, whether isolated in the prairies of the great Midwest or conjoined with the panoply of suburbia around great cities with increasingly ill-defined cores, are special places quiet enough and walkable enough to know neighbors, care about personal tragedies down the block, support grassroots revolutions against loss of schools or community grocery gatherings or parks or peaceful air. And like the other writers who have this Norman Rockwell way with words, Joe Woodward proves in this little matter of a book that he is a man of sound gifts as a writer, an observer, an entertainer, and a pickle barrel philosopher. This is a 'first book' that pleads for subsequent writings. Highly recommended reading. Grady Harp, January 2005
- This is a series of journalistic columns by author/journalist Joe Woodward. He's a Californian, yeah, that's right, one of those. I am sure my conservative friends and I would normally get into a good row with Mr. Woodward--but he makes his points about what's wrong with life in California eloquently. He writes about the first-time-homebuyers' assistance program. Hey, if you find a house for under $170,000 and are low income, you just might qualify. Sad to say, the median price of a home in his area is over $300K and bidding wars are happening on every house. Oops! And rents are over $1200. Where ARE people who don't earn six figures going to live? Hmmm. And he laments about the result of Prop 13 --the voter mandate to reduce property taxes that came about to keep homeowners on fixed incomes from having to sell their homes to pay rising property taxes but ended up with more inequities as the result. Million dollar properties pay less than $2000 a year in tax, while the community contributes less than 20% of the cost of running the schools. Yes, I agree with Mr. Woodward here--it's a problem.
But what I enjoyed more than the journal columns were the short stories and memoirs. One, about Mr. Woodward's mother, who came from Georgia and goes home again to see the house where she grew up was amazing. And the short story about the Lemon Festival Princess runner-up left me wanting more, much more of Joe Woodward's fiction.
If you live in California and like to read good journalistic essays on life on the Left Coast, this should appeal. I enjoyed it.
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Posted in Journalists (Friday, August 29, 2008)
Written by Garret Mathews. By Albion Press (FL).
The regular list price is $18.95.
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No comments about Past Deadlines, Past Lives: News, Views, and Second Thoughts.
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Trade Secrets
Edward R. Murrow: His Courage and Ideals Set the Standard for Broadcast Journalism (People Who Have Helped the World)
First Woman of the News (Famous Firsts Series/87003821)
In the Storm of the Eye
The Typewriter Guerrillas: Closeups of 20 Top Investigative Reporters
Fifty years an editor
A Corner of Chicago
The Best from Out West
Small Matters: A Year in Writing
Past Deadlines, Past Lives: News, Views, and Second Thoughts
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