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Category: Reading for WritersFriday, Jul 07
That's So Gay
Friday, Jun 30
The Mark Twain Library of Humor
Charles Dudley Warner's The Plumber (page down to see it) has some timeless advice on setting rates. Twain's How I Edited an Agricultural Paper Once will seem familiar to those who have written for trades; you can even listen to it if you are too tired to read. And if you have never read Twain, get right over to Project Gutenberg to see what's there. If you want to do some typing, Wikisource is looking for folks to enter the stories there, as many of those written by other authors have not been collected online. I was trying to find Eugene Field's wickedly funny "The First Day at Editing", but I could not. But trust me, PR freebies and the folks who live for them are not a new development. Monday, Apr 10
Lawsuits From EverywhereCharles Glasser started as a reporter in his teens and ended up reporting in Nicaragua, El Salvador, England and Spain. Today, he travels the world training reporters and editors of Bloomberg News how to responsibly exercise freedom of speech. In his new book, the International Libel and Privacy Handbook, Glasser attempts to demystify the world's libel laws in an era when all media is global. Fresh from a trip to Japan, Glasser took time to speak to Aileen Gallagher of mediabistro.com. Excerpts: Charles Glasser: If you teach people to get it right, if you teach people to be fair, be responsible, most of all, be clear. Most libel cases come from a well-founded, well-intended mistake. There are not all that many cases where a reporter acted with knowing falsity and reckless disregard for the truth. More often than not, libel cases occur because something wasn't well thought out and it wasn't well supported. The research wasn't as clean and clear as it should have been. More here. Monday, Jan 23
Excerpt: Journalistas
How does one define 'journalism'? The basic criteria for inclusion: the piece of writing should have been written for and first published in a newspaper or magazine. I wanted to reflect all the different sorts of articles in newspapers, so the anthology contains everything from first-hand accounts of battles, or events (such as Martha Gellhorn describing the horrors of Dachau or Ann Leslie witnessing the fall of the Berlin Wall) to book and film reviews, comment pieces, interviews, pamphlets, fiction (Bridget Jones began in a newspaper as a fictional diary about a singleton's life) and more personal features. Although women can report 'objectively' as well as any man, what women have really brought to newspapers is a more confessional, intimate voice. The strong voices of clever women warming to their themes and giving up details of their own lives and experiences in order to do so, comes across very clearly in this book. I am proud to have included such groundbreaking articles as Ruth Picardie's column written as she was dying of cancer, which spawned a whole subspecies of confessionals in imitation. More here. Wednesday, Jan 04
Putting Your Library Online
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