Search NYJB

Search

Search results

    Reviewed by: 

    Bad news breaks and a young girl tries to make sense of it. A gray cloud slips over the family and the community. The parents are sad and distracted. “Suddenly Mom is glued to the television.

    Reviewed by: 

    Despite flaws in his expectations of journalism, de Botton makes a number of astute observations about modern media.”

    Reviewed by: 

    News of the World by Paulette Jiles is everything a western novel ought to be: strong plot, evocative setting, difficult moral choices, and unforgettable characters.

    Reviewed by: 

    Everyone has skeletons in their closets and deals with problems at one time or another.

    Author(s):
    Genre(s):
    Reviewed by: 

    “The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is to love and be loved in return.”

    Reviewed by: 

    “This is the work of a skilled storyteller—a writer in control of her craft.”

    Reviewed by: 

    We can carve journalism into two distinct cuts: the tough, chewy chuck of reporting and recording events and facts, and the sirloin of narrative.

    Reviewed by: 

    Newspaperman is part memoir, part history. . . .

    Reviewed by: 

    “Liberal bias in the elite media has been prevalent for quite a while, but Ungar-Sargon’s book shows that it has gotten much worse.”

    Reviewed by: 

    “Brian Stalter’s book explores the perfidious relationship between the president of the United States and Fox News, an affiliation that explains much about the catastrophe of Trump’s term i

    Reviewed by: 

    Slanted is Attkisson’s most recent effort to expose the biases and corruption in the mainstream media even as she laments ‘the death of the news as we once knew it.’”

    Reviewed by: 

    The role of the news establishment and the American newspaper has undergone several profound transformations in American history.

    Reviewed by: 

    “We Are Bellingcat reveals the power within each one of us to pierce the walls of disinformation and learn the truth about what’s happening out there.”

    Reviewed by: 

    “The First Amendment doesn’t license all speech, nor does it immunize the speaker from any consequences of that speech.

    Reviewed by: 

    “Despite the many, many books on Abraham Lincoln, books such as this one bring us the closest to the real man.”

    Reviewed by: 

    “one can only hope that many more writers will tackle the methodology of untruth—well beyond Conway’s technique—during this bizarre and perilous political era.”

    Reviewed by: 

    Although The New Rules of Marketing and PR is an update of the 2007 first edition book of the same name, it can also be considered as a sequel to Jay Conrad Levinson’s seminal Guerilla

    Reviewed by: 

    “Understanding the man behind Fox News, how his juggernaut was assembled, and how it is captained shines a new light on news reporting—whether one leans port or starboard.”

    Reviewed by: 

    sure to entertain and dazzle all who take in its exceptionally crafted words.”

    Good news and bad news. Such is life.

    Genre(s):
    Reviewed by: 

    Mention the news company, Al Jazeera, and it’s likely the response will not be without a strong opinion of the Qatar-based news network.

Pages