Average customer rating:
|
American Police Dilemma: Protectors or Enforcers?
Johannes F. Spreen , and
Diane E. Holloway
Manufacturer: Writers Club Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Rich & Famous
| Leaders & Notable People
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Law Enforcement
| Criminal Law
| Law
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Politics
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
True Crime
| True Accounts
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Political Science
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Law Enforcement
| Criminal Law
| Law
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0595269826 |
Book Description
"Commissioner Johannes Spreen was a police officer extraordinary; a man who helped restructure and develop New York City Police Academy training leading to a college program, a 'West Point' for officers, now John Jay College for Criminal Justice. Johannes Spreen is a man of enthusiasm, indeed a prophet; always ahead of his time and brought his talent to Detroit as Police Commissioner and later Sheriff of Oakland County." Rudolph P. Blaum, Retired Captain, New York City Police Department, John Jay College, former president American Education Association.
This book describes how policing has gradually emphasized law enforcement over the protection of people. It is a compelling book by an innovative and gifted top cop who presents a convincing case for community-oriented policing. This story of policing urban America over several decades covers politics, crime control, leadership, mental and physical conditioning, morals, and rivalries that reduce effectiveness. Besides being a role model for youth, police officers, administrators and policy analysts, Commissioner Spreen used wit and literary brilliance to describe his career and these issues through charming letters to his daughter.
Book Description
As The Legend of Bagger Vance has inspired a movie, it has also inspired a book about its two most famous charactersWalter Hagen and Bobby Jones. Stephen Lowes Sir Walter Mr. Jones is an amazingly detailed cradle-to-the-grave account of the lives and achievements of these two great players.
Customer Reviews:
Wonderful biography of two great golf legends.......2004-09-09
Beautifully written and factual.
The author introduces us to the two most accomplished golfer of their era.
This book is for anyone who not only enjoys the game of golf but also its historical context.
Very good and enjoyable read.
Know what you're getting!.......2002-09-04
This is a serious work by a professor of history. It ISN'T filled with anecdotes ("And then Walter said to Bobby ..."), descriptions of shots ("Bobby then drilled a quail-high mashie between the towering pines ..."), gossip, swing analyses, etc. If this is what you're looking for, you'll be sorely disappointed. It's fairly dry -- make that extremely dry -- but is well-researched (hundreds of endnotes) and will be fascinating for anyone with an interest in the history of American golf. The format is a dual biography of Jones and Hagen in which their respective careers are compared and contrasted to give the reader an understanding of the rise of American golf in the era 1900-1930. The two men were so different in virtually every respect that this approach is very effective. Those who think golf began with Palmer, Nicklaus or Woods will gain an appreciation of what "gods" Jones and Hagen really were during the era in which they played. Hagen especially tends to be overlooked, but this book is an important reminder that he was one of the true greats of the game in addition to being one of its two or three all-time "characters." I didn't have the feeling that the author was particularly knowledgeable or avid about the game -- instead, this is a work of historical research, just as you or I might produce a history of badminton if we were willing to spend the time to do the research. When you're done, you won't "know" Bobby Jones as well as you'd know him if you read his and O. B. Keeler's own voluminous writings, and you won't be a fount of anecdotes, but you will have a solid grasp of Jones' and Hagen's place in history, how golf became an American obsession and how American golf eclipsed British golf. All of this for the price of a couple of dozen Top-Flite x-outs.
Great read.......2001-05-17
After reading this book, I found that Dr. Stephen Lowe really brings to life the lives of Bobby Jones and Walter Hagen. This book is written in a descriptive oriented reading. Before reading this book, I found that golf was not much of a sport. I found that there is truly a rich history in golf that I have come to respect and want to learn more about. I applaud Dr. Lowe and hope to read future writings.
A Very Insightful Book!.......2001-05-10
A meticulously researched book, an asset to any avid golfers bookshelf.
All facts!.......2001-05-07
I was very disapointed in this book. It seemed more like a collection of facts than a insightful biography. I felt I learn little about the two man that I could not have found in a enclopedia.
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Journal of Southern History, published by Southern Historical Association on August 1, 2002. The length of the article is 458 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Sir Walter and Mr. Jones: Walter Hagen, Bobby Jones, and the Rise of American Golf.(Brief Article)
Author: Ira D. Gruber
Publication:
Journal of Southern History (Refereed)
Date: August 1, 2002
Publisher: Southern Historical Association
Volume: 68
Issue: 3
Page: 737(2)
Article Type: Book Review, Brief Article
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
This collection of essays by leading American film scholars charts a whole new territory in genre film criticism. Rather than assuming that genres are self-evident categories, the contributors offer innovative ways to think about types of films, and patterns within films, in a historical context. Challenging familiar attitudes, the essays offer new conceptual frameworks and a fresh look at how popular culture functions in American society.
The range of essays is exceptional, from David J. Russell's insights into the horror genre to Carol J. Clover's provocative take on "trial films" to Leo Braudy's argument for the subject of nature as a genre. Also included are essays on melodrama, race, film noir, and the industrial context of genre production.
The contributors confront the poststructuralist critique of genre head-on; together they are certain to shape future debates concerning the viability and vitality of genre in studying American cinema.
Book Description
F. Scott Fitzgerald named it, Louis Armstrong launched it, Paul Whiteman and Fletcher Henderson orchestrated it, and now Arnold Shaw chronicles this fabulous era in his marvelously engrossing book, appropriately called The Jazz Age. Enriching his account with lively anecdotes and inside stories, he describes the astonishing outpouring of significant musical innovations that emerged during the "Roaring Twenties"--including blues, jazz, band music, torch ballads, operettas, and musicals--and sets them against the background of the Prohibition world of the Flapper and the Gangster. The Jazz Age offers an insider's view into the significant developments and personalities of the jazz age, including the maturation and Americanization of the Broadway musical theater, the explosion of the arts celebrated in the Harlem Renaissance, the rise of the Classic Blues Singers, and the evolution of ragtime into stride piano. It also contains a bibliography, detailed discography, and listings of the songs of the twenties in Variety's "Golden 100" and of films featuring singers and songwriters of the era.
Customer Reviews:
American pop music in the 20s.......2007-05-04
This goody describes American popular and show music during the period; Jazz was one of these forms and interacted in a number of ways with the other music. It's essential to show the proper place of jazz in the American music scene, but is more a basic introduction for anyone interested in the period.
This book was a fantastic overview of the music of the era........1999-11-04
I thought this book was captivating! It captured the essence of the music of that time. Jazz is such music of the soul. In a sense, you feel as if you know what it was like in the 1920's. When the jazz was jazz.
This book was a fantastic overview of the music of the era........1999-11-04
I thought this book was captivating! It captured the essence of the music of that time. Jazz is such music of the soul. In a sense, you feel as if you know what it was like in the 1920's. When the jazz was jazz.
Average customer rating:
- Huge amount of info for chess/abstract games lovers
- Chess Eccentricities
|
Encyclopedia of Chess Variants
David Pritchard
Manufacturer: Games & Puzzles Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Chess
| Board Games
| Puzzles & Games
| Entertainment
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Puzzles & Games
| Entertainment
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0952414201 |
Customer Reviews:
Huge amount of info for chess/abstract games lovers.......1999-10-22
You can see different ideas from other games (and not only) from the point of view of chess.
Chess Eccentricities.......1999-06-04
Given the fact that few chess players wish to play anything other than orthodox chess, it is amazing how many variations there are on the theme of chess. Pritchard catalogs hundreds of them. Pritchard explores the world of chess variants from micro chess played on a 4x4 board to tai shogi, a Japanese chess variant played on a 25x25 board with hundreds of pieces. Pritchard does his best work when he is describing the many historical and regional variants of chess. Two regional variants are described in detail, Chinese chess (xiang qi) and Japanese chess (shogi). Chinese chess may actually be played by more people than orthodox chess, and Japanese chess may very well be a better game than orthodox chess. If you are interested in the history of chess, its ancient and regional variations, and the odd lengths to which human imagination can go in modifying the game, this book is for you.
Book Description
Whatever good or service you're selling, five likely customers are worth a hundred random names. No one can help you find new business by finding those five -- or five hundred, or fifty thousand -- best-qualified customers better than Bill Good.
For over a decade, Bill Good's guide to increasing new business by finding the right prospective customers has been an invaluable resource to people in every imaginable profession involving selling. Now completely revised and updated to include lessons on how email, fax machines, and the Internet can be incorporated into an effective prospecting and selling campaign, it is the most valuable tool a salesperson can own.
Anyone who does any prospecting or selling by phone -- from securities, insurance, and real estate to fund-raising -- knows the frustrations and rejections inherent in "cold calling." Many people come to fear it. But why should this be so? Certainly there are people out there who need and want the product you're selling. If only you could more efficiently generate a list of just those people, weed out the hopeless cases, and launch a simple and highly effective campaign to win them to your side. Prospecting Your Way to Sales Success shows you how to do just that. Bill Good draws on all he's learned from a long, successful career teaching companies and individual entrepreneurs how to create successful prospecting campaigns. He jettisons the stale, old-school, don't-believe-a-customer-who-says-no philosophy for a plan of attack that finds good prospects while quickly screening out unqualified, uninterested customers. From the first contact to the final close, Bill Good will help you design a complete, customized prospecting campaign.
In this new revised edition, bursting with fresh ideas for incorporating new media and new technologies into his proven campaign strategies, Bill Good has updated a classic and given salespeople everywhere a book they can't afford to live without.
Customer Reviews:
VERY GOOD.......2006-06-25
The book is extremely good because it shows how to keep the salesman on his toes instead of getting complacent and losing the 'touch' by becoming more of a computer person.
If you are in direct one-to-one selling - get this book!
SATPAL
Sales as a system.......2005-10-24
Have you ever heard the sales war stories that start off,
"Charlie just landed a big account at X company. I talked to them six months ago and they weren't ready to buy. I was going to call them back but now Charlie is in there."
If you follow the techniques in Bill Good's Prospecting Your Way to Sales Success, that won't happen to you. (unless your name is Charlie!)
Bill Good offers a systematic approach to managing your contacts, leads and prospects in a red-hot to luke-warm priority system. It also does something that many sales managers I've worked with are reluctant to do. Stop approaching the rude non-prospect jerks who beat you up, move on to more professional prospects.
Prospecting Your Way to Sales Success will allow you to do just that.
Use Bill Good's system for prospecting and managing prospects and you will increase your sales.
Very Good Tools.......2005-02-22
I have used the teachings of Bill Good and this book to build a successful financial services business. It is highly recommended.
I made an extra $10,000.00 the second month after reading.......2004-09-01
I'm in heavy equipment sales. No I'm not a shill as the moronic idiot wrote in one of the previous reviews giving this top shelf sales book only one star. I am however a top salesman of equipment and I have to say that after using just one of the great ideas that this man has to offer I was able to generate an additional ten grand in income. Not a fluke. The hard won sales savvy that this man has given to this book is worth its weight in gold. Buy it. Read it. But most of all USE IT! It has been several years since my purchase but I refer to it again and again. I can think of no other book I have read in my sales career that has had the impact this one has on my income and my approach to database driven selling and marketing.
Get This Book to Keep as Reference for Prospecting Success.......2004-02-07
A number of years ago, I fortunately stumbled upon Bill's book - PROSPECTING YOUR WAY TO SALES SUCCESS. I was so incredibly impressed by the book that I phoned Bill and told him I was interested in writing an article about him & his book. (I am the Publisher of AboutBizz Magazine and www.AboutBizz.com)
I arrived in Salt Lake City and spent 4 days with his staff and new as well as old users of Bill techniques and software package. What I found amazing is the system that Bill spells out in his book is literally automated in his software package that he markets primarily to the Financial services industry. People use his system and make money. That's all that counts...bottom line results.
Here's what you'll find in pages of PROSPECTING YOUR WAY TO SALES SUCCESS.
1) He helps you discover the mindset needed for prospecting
2) He shows you how to create a system for prospecting using only 4x6 cards, various colored stickers and tracking sheets.
3) He gives you a simple script to use when prospecting
4) He shows you his approach to constantly "touch" you prospects with various letters, phone calls, faxes, etc....
5) Most importantly, he teaches you how to teach that same system to someone else so you can leverage your time and make money (or as he calls it Muh-Nee) with the people who are interested in selling you and buying your services or goods.
I have never found another book that spells out such a powerful system. The only thing wrong with the book is it is somewhat dated...why use card files when you can use ACT, Maximizer or Salesforce.com? But if you are new to business or sales and pennies are tight, then using Bill's book, you CAN make a system with simple cards and stickers and in short time, you can buy whatever computer you desire.
I know Bill sells his software system to the Financial services industry and only wish he had a generic version to sell to the others of us who could use his system. I tried to customize Maximizer to do what his system does...but quickly found the real value of Bill Good's expertise.
It is definitely worth your time to check out his website at www.BillGood.com ON his site you'll find audio programs from his Bill Good Radio.com programs where he interviews successful users of his programs. Tell them Wayne Clayton from AboutBizz Magazine told you about their site...they do have some restrictions of who can get into the site...maybe that'll help get you in.
What's the real value of a book like this? Well, when gasoline gets to $2-$3-$4 bucks a gallon, it is the person on the phone who can get make appointments and grow relationships using technology (email, fax, letters, phone calls -- and with a real reason to contact them, not just send them worthless literature) that will succeed and make money. Go out and guy this book today.
As a closing note, I have appreciated this book so much that I have personally bought and gave away 10 copies to people who I want to have success in sales...(and I NEVER buy that many of the same book!) Hopefully someday, Bill will get the chance to update his book and incorporate more examples of technology used to help implement his wonderful system.
Average customer rating:
|
How to Ask Your Way to Success (The Results Collection)
Manufacturer: Results Media
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Audio Cassette
Sales
| Business
| Books on Cassette
| Audiobooks
| Formats
| Books
General
| Business & Investing
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: B000GLN6AE |
Product Description
6 Cassette tapes and Study Guide. How to sell $1,000 week after week after week. Professional Selling Skills, handling objections, body language, closing, time management, goal setting, 75 Opening Questions, the Art of Asking Questions, 3 Types of Questions, the 30-85% contrast - get excited about you!
Customer Reviews:
A handbook on battling two culture.......2007-07-20
I have read many book in short, and few have had the impact this book had on me. It was an inspiring and emotional description of how children of immigrant parents are sometimes from old world beliefs and new world knowledge. Richard elegantly describes his battle and rightfully titles his book as an argument to his father that he is no less of a mexican if he acquires other beliefs of knowledge that contradicts that of old Mexico. It was a breathtaking book that I connected to it in some level. The quotes and images of old Mexico and trying to "prove" that you are no less mexican is a reality that many of mexican american kids face today. For them, this book is a must read.
Not For Everyone, Not As It Seems, Better Than You Think........2006-07-07
Richard Rodriguez, is, to say the least, a dense writer. His prose overflows with allusions to the demonic Romantic founder William Blake, work ethic orientated Victorian philosopher Thomas Carlyle, with small dash of natural theologian St. Thomas Aquinas, among others. And these are only the obvious references to me. Add that to classical literature, Roman Catholic philosophy, pre and post lapsearian filters on the role of Mexican Americans in the United States, and you have a philosophical self examination that rivals Dante Alighieri. "Days of Obligation" is a purposely dense, complex, at times conciliatory and confusing allegory of examination of self via international relations. Rodriguez attempts to unravel the relationship between Mexico and California as he unravels his own relationship with the native land of his parents.
He opens his collection with his travels with a BBC crew to find his roots. He feels alienated in a place where everyone assumes he would feel most comfortable. This feeling of alienation continues throughout the collection, and extends to his observations of alienation of those around him. Father Huerta is alienated from others because of his yearning to reunite the body and head of Joaquín Murrieta. The disillusion between the tú and usted forms in Mexico. The alienation that he feels from his family. More optimistic about his life's potential than his fathers cynicism, more comfortable than his mother who dreams about better days in Mexico.
What I found most interesting about this collection is that it seemed, whether intentional or not, to follow basic Blakean philosophy. He makes a reference to a "Blakean angel" in "Late Victorians", which to me implies that he had some conscience effort go into that. One of the tenets of William Blakes philosophy is often misunderstood as duality, but its actually the opposite. In a simplified sense, Blake believed that people are neither good or bad, but both good and bad at the same time. And I think that is how Rodriguez sees himself in this collection. He is neither American nor is Mexican, he is both, living in both worlds, unable to fully commit to one or the either.
Another interesting thing that I noticed was an emphasis on work. Thomas Carlyle wrote that work was therapeutic, purification process, that made people more focused. Rodriguez seems to play on that idea in a satirical tone in `Late Victorians' when he writes that "Body building is a parody of labor, a useless accumulation of the laborer's bulk and strength" Rodriguez seems to believe that there should a reason for work, but this is such an obscure allusion that I'm not sure what to do with it. The book seems to continue with this theme also, but there is nothing specifically that I can point out that seems to obviously fit with that model.
I brought up Thomas Aquinas because Rodriguez is a Catholic apologist. As well as a gay man. I thought that tied up into the Blakean philosophy quiet well. Two forces that are generally seen as opposing forces coexisting in one being at the same time in the same place. He is constantly defending the Church, something that I'm sure many people would find perplexing giving the Church's position on homosexuality.
I greatly enjoyed the book. It was unlike any other non fiction that I have read. It doesn't concern itself with the typical "I feel--" statements that generally profusely overflow in contemporary non fiction. His style is reminiscent of Alexander Pope in a way--dense and literal at the same time; pretentious and personal. There is no doubt that his postulations will cause some people to walk away puzzled. He has no yearning to return to Mexico, as some people may assume, but is more than willing to admit that he does not understand the country as much as he would like. He's more than willing to, and does, to write above the average readers head. This alone is what most likely turn readers off. Unless one has a background in ethnic studies, theology, or English literature, the metaphors, references and allusions will go over the everyday readers head. But research into whatever questions the reader has will ultimately make reading the collection a richer experience.
Over all, I enjoyed the book, and when my next pay period comes in, I know that I will make a few purchases of his other works to get a greater understanding of his writing. And that is one of the greatest compliment I think that any writer can receive.
English is not a toy........2004-09-03
"European vocabularies do not have a silence rich enough to describe the force within Indian contemplation. Only Shakespeare understood that Indians have eyes." (p. 23) And how would Mr. Rodriquez know anything about the force of Indian contemplation? He doesn't allow Americans, among whom he numbers himself, to know much of anything. And what's this about Shakespeare? Didn't he just say something about European vocabularies?
Informed by his immersion in Elizabethan English, Rodriguez fashions poetry out of absurdity, misanthropy and breathtaking contradiction. He fools high school kids (and it seems a lot have been assigned this book), but the educated, well read adult will be skeptical. How can he complain that he was taught that the Indians were gone, then drag multicultural education through the mud? I'm ANGRY that U.S. history was fed to me divorced from North America. I thought Montezuma was a legend! I defend all efforts at inclusion even when some ridiculous stuff comes along with it. Keep those ideas coming!
And why is it that the people who have benefited most from affirmative action spit in its face? It's especially odd coming from a man whose parents moved to the U.S. for the express purpose of bettering their children.
Rodriguez is entertaining on the topic of alienation, but he's the perfect example of why I've yearned for a minority gripe: It gives the human soul a hook on which to hang the cloak all mortals wear, the weight of an elegiac separation from God and other people. It's not about being Mexican/American, it's about the human condition: Read the poetry of the precortesian Mexican philosopher Nezahualcoyotl, who, as King of Texcoco, was hardly a stranger in a strange land.
Warning to readers: Rodriguez saves all his personal attacks for women. If you find man-hating literature tiresome, which I do, beware misogyny from a man who waxes lyrical about bedpans.
Rodriguez strives valiantly to be Octavio Paz, and is even trotted out as our answer to Mexico's Nobel laureate. (See, we Americans can search our souls in inscrutable, contradictory ways, too!) My advice? READ OCTAVIO PAZ INSTEAD. At least he loved life.
The Juicy Apple.......2004-05-25
Rodriguez sinks his teeth into the juicy apple of race and somehow pulls off enlightening concrete distinctions between the single extant species of Homo sapiens remaining on earth. Essentially (and we allow here for the purposes of discussion some generalities) Rodriguez asserts that Americans/Northern Europeans are divorced psychologically from their historically inseparable neighbors, the Mexicans/Indians, because the Americans/Northern Europeans represent masculine, aggressive, individualistic, Protestant, optimistic, or "comic" values. The passive, Catholic, communal, familial, feminine value systems of the Mexicans/Indians he terms "tragic." (The tragic race, incidentally, is much happier and less medicated, etc., it's so substantially less destructive and selfish.) I grew up in Southern California, lived in Mexico for a few years, and three years ago married a Mexican woman, so I epitomize the fabulous collision of opposite worlds that this book describes (and really helped me to understand). Gorgeously composed, arrogantly honest, and a whole lot more. Intellectually one of the ten most important books of the last two decades. When I admire a book I immediately read it again. I read this one three times.
A controversial voice that deserves to be heard.......2002-08-01
In this and his other collection of personal essays, "Hunger of Memory," Richard Rodriguez describes how becoming an American has been an experience much like Alice's trip through the looking glass. It has distanced him from his Mexican-born parents and separated him almost entirely from his Mexican roots. The central idea running through many of these thoughtful, earnest essays is a heightened awareness of the differences between our public and private lives. They also focus on the impact of education on himself and his siblings as children of Spanish-speaking immigrants.
After reading his books, nothing about becoming American seems as simple as it's often represented in popular fiction and movies. You see, for example, how learning English and the way Americans use it immediately create cultural conflicts. Rodriguez' parents had valued education as a way to get ahead in America. Ironically, the greater success he experienced in school, the further he became removed from the world of his parents.
Still a boy, he lost the ability to converse in Spanish. Becoming a public figure in the English-speaking world, he seemed to betray his ethnic background, which valued privacy and separateness from the English-speaking (gringo) world. Ironically, for all his achievements as an "American," Rodriguez learns that because of his background, he remains in many ways an outsider. Lacking a middle class upbringing, he has passed through the educational system as a "scholarship boy." This term, borrowed from Richard Hoggart's book "The Uses of Literacy," describes the son of working class parents who is granted the privilege of a middle class education, but while rising above his humble origins, never fully transcends them.
The political positions Rodreguez takes as an adult flow as a logical extension from the experiences that shaped him -- especially the benefits of the education he received in a private school. Later there were the benefits that came to him as a "minority student" -- advantages he considered unwarranted. Concerned by poverty in America and the underfunding of schools that would help end poverty, he takes positions that have been unpopular among many educators. In these essays, he challenges the assumptions underlying both affirmative action and bilingual education.
Rodriguez writes with great clarity, and his sentences seem crafted with considerable care. He wants very much to say precisely what he means. And this cannot have been always easy, as many of his ideas grapple with both irony and paradox. Often you read paragraphs that seem to have been thought through deeply, then carefully written and rewritten. The care that he takes in writing these essays reflects a wish to be read carefully. Those who have found reason to be offended, angered, or "bored" by his ideas are evidence that he touches on a great many sensitive issues.
Book Description
Many civilians on both sides during the Civil War hoped to support the war effort as spies, but only a few actually became useful agents. One of the most effective-and least known-was a woman living in the heart of Confederate Richmond. Elizabeth Van Lew, called "Crazy Bet" by her suspicious and condescending neighbors, maintained contact with Union authorities throughout most of the war and earned the thanks of Gen. U. S. Grant, among others, at the war's end. The secret diary Van Lew kept during those years provides an unparalleled account of the life of a Civil War spy. Her sporadic notations reveal her fears, her triumphs, and the constant danger she faced in sending information through the lines to the Yankees while aiding the escape attempts of Union prisoners in Richmond.
Amazon.com
A lot of big-shot journalists didn't like this book, a systematic jeremiad about the current sad state of American political journalism. For instance, both the New York Times op-ed page and the New Yorker took pains to excoriate the book and its author--pretty good hints that Fallows is onto something. His point is that greed and intellectual sloth have fostered a political media elite that increasingly focuses on spin and ignores substance at the very time when solving the country's real problems requires all possible nuance.
Book Description
Why do Americans mistrust the news media? It may be because show like "The McLaughlin Group" reduce participating journalists to so many shouting heads. Or because, increasingly, the profession treats issues as complex as health-care reform and foreign policy as exercises in political gamesmanship. These are just a few of the arguments that have made
Breaking the News so controversial and so widely acclaimed. Drawing on his own experience as a National Book Award-winning journalist--and on the gaffes of colleagues from George Will to Cokie Roberts--Fallows shows why the media have not only lost our respect but alienated us from our public life.
"Important and lucid...It moves smartly beyond the usual attacks on sensationalism and bias to the more profound problems in modern American journalism...dead-on."--Newsweek
Customer Reviews:
Interesting New Take on Something We Already Know.......2006-11-24
The author has done a superb job of researching this treatise on a media out of control. Many we illustrative examples are given to prove the author's point and the writing style is good as well.
Between what is presented here and listening to the pundits who spout at the mouth along their own agendas in the radio, it is difficult for anybody to ever figure out what is fact and what is what someone wants things to be. Very thought provoking!
good book but not his best work.......2006-03-09
Fallows is very smart and an excellent writer. This book is very good but I do not believe it to be his best work. However, this is an important part of any survey or recent books on the large problems within the US media.
Liberal vs. Conservative? No Contest.......2004-10-19
I first met James Fallows online in the early '90s, and then in person several times. For a Rhodes Scholar and Harvard grad, he was surprisingly in touch with the realities I knew as a moderate Westerner living in the East. He was kind enough to give me a copy of Breaking the News, and I found it to be a great read. It offered new perspectives and excellent explanations on the sorry state of today's journalism, far beyond the traditional but simplistic explanation of "liberal bias." Jim's perspective truly transcends the partisan and raises issues above the divisive fray that almost tragically seems to divide our great country. Although critics may contend that Jim offers a liberal apologist's view that liberal bias is not the primary problem (or even much of a problem at all), even my friends who are staunch conservatives should find little to disagree with and much to learn in "Breaking the News."
media wanting power.......2004-03-26
The book Breaking The News:How the Media Undermine American Democracy by James Fallows is a well written book. It tells about issues that we should hear and it may change how the people view the media and how the media have control and why we shouldn't always believe what we hear on the news. The author tells about how the media controls how we see our goverment. It's not so much about how important issues should be resolved like health care, education, etc.,but more on what is controversial about it. It has also affects the political system. The media and journalist only show or write about issues that will get people's attention so that they could get the money that they want, not so much to find a soulution. They don't care so much about the issues, all they just want is the attention and the money. This affects how people view the polical system.
Superb book on our most important national issue!.......2004-01-14
Appalled at the biases, distortions and omissions in the media, which have been worsening since 9-11, I recently launched on a campaign of study in regard to learning about the deterioration of the media and the influence of corporate control - and what we can do to counter it. This is one of the best, most informative and most readable of the six books on the subject I've read. I can't emphasize enough how important it is, how much our corporate-run media influence political thinking, decisionmaking and voting and influence not only the outcome of elections but the agenda and actions of politicians - and how motivated we need to become in order to counter it, to become informed about political realities rather than propaganda and myth, and as a country, to become more of a democracy and less of a plutocracy. The biggest difficult we face is that the media itself is not likely to publicize its own corruption, and is actively blocking attempts of people concerned with these issues inform the public. I also highly recommend the books on media disinformation and reform by Robert McChesney, including his mini-books Corporate Media and the Threat to Democracy and Our Media, Not Theirs.
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Argumentation and Advocacy, published by American Forensic Association on September 22, 1996. The length of the article is 1172 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy. (book reviews)
Author: Craig A. Dudczak
Publication:
Argumentation and Advocacy (Refereed)
Date: September 22, 1996
Publisher: American Forensic Association
Volume: v33
Issue: n2
Page: p105(3)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
This digital document is an article from American Journalism Review, published by University of Maryland on March 1, 1996. The length of the article is 729 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy.
Author: Carl Sessions Stepp
Publication:
American Journalism Review (Refereed)
Date: March 1, 1996
Publisher: University of Maryland
Volume: v18
Issue: n2
Page: p46(1)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Columbia Journalism Review, published by Columbia University, Graduate School of Journalism on March 1, 1996. The length of the article is 2249 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy.
Author: Ellen Hume
Publication:
Columbia Journalism Review (Refereed)
Date: March 1, 1996
Publisher: Columbia University, Graduate School of Journalism
Volume: v34
Issue: n6
Page: p49(4)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Average customer rating:
|
Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy.: An article from: Presidential Studies Quarterly
Mark J. Rozell
Manufacturer: Center for the Study of the Presidency
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Digital
History
| Subjects
| Books
| Africa
| Americas
| Ancient
| Arctic & Antarctica
| Asia
| Audiobooks
| Australia & Oceania
| Books on CD
| Books on Cassette
| Europe
| Gay & Lesbian
| Historical Study
| Large Print
| Middle East
| Military
| Military Science
| Russia
| United States
| World
General
| Politics
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Political Science
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| e-Docs
| Formats
| Books
General
| History
| Subjects
| e-Docs
| Formats
| Books
General
| History
| HTML
| Formats
| e-Docs
| Formats
| Books
General
| Nonfiction
| HTML
| Formats
| e-Docs
| Formats
| Books
Political Science
| Nonfiction
| HTML
| Formats
| e-Docs
| Formats
| Books
ASIN: B00097T104
Release Date: 2005-07-28 |
Book Description
This digital document is an article from Presidential Studies Quarterly, published by Center for the Study of the Presidency on September 22, 1997. The length of the article is 587 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Breaking the News: How the Media Undermine American Democracy.
Author: Mark J. Rozell
Publication:
Presidential Studies Quarterly (Refereed)
Date: September 22, 1997
Publisher: Center for the Study of the Presidency
Volume: v27
Issue: n4
Page: p858(2)
Article Type: Book Review
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Average customer rating:
|
The Millennium Atlas of Butterflies in Britain and Ireland
Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Butterflies
| Animals
| Biological Sciences
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Insects & Spiders
| Animals
| Biological Sciences
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Entomology
| Biology
| Biological Sciences
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Invertebrates
| Zoology
| Biological Sciences
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Ecology
| Biological Sciences
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Conservation
| Environment
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Conservation
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
Butterflies
| Field Guides
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
Insects & Spiders
| Field Guides
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
Reference
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
Northern Ireland
| Great Britain
| Europe
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Ireland
| Europe
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
Entomology
| Biology
| Biological Sciences
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Ecology
| Biological Sciences
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
ASIN: 0198505655 |
Book Description
This full-colour, superbly illustrated atlas presents the findings of Butterflies for the New Millennium, the most comprehensive survey of butterflies ever undertaken in Britain and Ireland. After five years of recording by thousands of volunteers, it provides an up-to-date assessment of our butterflies, the habitats they live in, the threats they face, and the major changes that have occurred since publication of the previous such atlas in 1984. The body of the book is taken up with species by species accounts, each accompanied by a full-page distribution map and colour photographs of the butterfly concerned. A wider context is provided by considering long-term trends in distribution, derived from 200 years of recording and recent changes elsewhere in Europe. In addition, the book summarises the wealth of new information about butterfly ecology, incorporates findings from the Butterfly Monitoring Scheme, describes and illustrates the habitats favoured by particular communities of butterflies, and presents a vision of how these popular insects might be conserved in the future. As such, it will be invaluable to a wide range of readers, from amateur naturalists to professional conservationists and policy makers.
Books:
- Art Lover: A Biography of Peggy Guggenheim
- As I See It: The Autobiography of J. Paul Getty
- Beck!: On a Backwards River: The Story of Beck
- Bill Gates Speaks: Insight from the World's Greatest Entrepreneur
- Biography Today 2000: Profiles of People of Interest to Young Readers (Biography Today Annual Cumulation)
- Black Jack Bouvier: The Life and Times of Jackie O's Father
- Born to Build, the Story of the Gene B. Glick Company
- Bronwen Astor: Her Life and Times
- Call Me Pat: The Autobiography of the Man Howard Hughes Chose to Lead Hughes Aircraft
- Can I Play, Too?
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- Lincoln: A Life of Purpose and Power
- Real Parents Real Children
- Marques De Collections De Dessins & D'estampes, Avec Des Notices Historiques Sur Les Collectionn
- Inside the Jewelry Box: A Collector's Guide To Costume Jewelry, Identification And Values
- How to Succeed in the Game of Life: 34 Interviews with the World's Greatest Coaches
- History: Fiction or Science
- Intimate Relationships: Issues, Theories, and Research
- EAGLE'S PLUME: Preserving the Life and Habitat of America's Bald Eagle
- I Inherited a Fortune
- The genus Lithophragma