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1. City Editor
New York City in the 1920s and 1930s was a great newspaper town, and few people knew the exciting world of breaking stories and five-star finals as ... More
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2. City Editor
by Stanley Walker, Professor Alexander Woollcott (Foreword by)
New York City in the 1920s and 1930s was a great newspaper town, and few people knew the exciting world of breaking stories and five-star finals as ... More
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3. Written Into History
by Anthony Lewis (Introduction by)
Pulitzer Prize winner Anthony Lewis has culled through the newspaper's most acclaimed reporting to chronicle life and history as it was happening, ... More
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4. Written Into History: Pulitzer Prize Reporting of the Twentieth Century from the New York Times
by Anthony Lewis (Editor)
With each news day, history unfolds as steadfast journalists uncover facts and public opinion. Drawn from the "New York Times"'s archive of an ... More
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5. Forward: The Jewish Daily Forward (Forverts) Newspaper: Immigrants, Socialism and Jewish Politics in New York, 1890-1917
by Ehud Manor
This book examines the role the Jewish Daily Forward (JDF) played during the heyday of Jewish immigration to the US, from 1897 to 1917. The JDF was a ... More
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6. McCarthyism and New York's Hearst Press: A Study of Roles in the Witch Hunt
by Jim Tuck
This hard-hitting, meticulously researched study provides an in-depth analysis of the bizarre relationship between Senator Joe McCarthy and the ... More
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7. When Giants Ruled: The Story of Park Row, NY's Great Newspaper Street
by Hy B Turner
When Giants Ruled takes the reader behind the scenes of a century of newspaper life. It relates how Benjamin Day, a job printer desperate for more ... More
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8. The Rise and Fall of the Saturday Globe
by Ralph Frasca
This book is a history of the country's first truly "national" newspaper. The Saturday Globe helped pioneer many printing techniques and was one of ... More
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9. Louis Miller & Di Warheit ("THE TRUTH"): Yiddishism, Zionism & Socialism in New York, 1905-1915
by Ehud Manor
This book tells the story of Di Warheit ("The Truth"), a Yiddish daily established in New York in late 1905. Its founder, Louis Miller (1866-1927), ... More
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12. Hard News: Twenty-One Brutal Months at the New York Times and How They Changed the American Media
by Seth Mnookin
In this expos of the 2004 Jayson Blair debacle at the "New York Times," Mnookin tells the story behind the scam and the profound implications of the ... More
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13. American Gangster: And Other Tales of New York
by Mark Jacobson
In 1970s New York, the ruthless Frank Lucas was the king of the Harlem drug trade, bringing in more than a million dollars a day. There were so many ... More
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14. We Fall and Rise: Russian-Language Newspapers in New York City, 1889-1914
by Professor Robert A Karlowich
The first extensive account of Russian-language newspapers' attempt to find a permanent audience in America.
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15. Ted Poston: Pioneer American Journalist
Ted Poston: Pioneer American Journalist is the life story of the first African American reporter to spend his career at a mainstream daily. After ... More
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18. The flash press: sporting male weeklies in 1840s New York
by Patricia Cline Cohen, Timothy J Gilfoyle, Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz
Obscene, libidinous, loathsome, lascivious. Those were just some of the ways critics described the nineteenth-century weeklies that covered and ... More
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19. Right Places, Right Times
by Hedley Donovan
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20. The Flash Press: Sporting Male Weeklies in 1840s New York
by Timothy J Gilfoyle, Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz, American Antiquarian Society
Obscene, libidinous, loathsome, lascivious. Those were just some of the ways critics described the nineteenth-century weeklies that covered and ... More
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22. The Paper's Papers: A Reporter's Journeys Through the Archives of the New York Times
by Richard F Shepard
In August of 1896, an ambitious publisher from Chattanooga, Adolph Ochs, bought the almost bankrupt New York Times. Shepard, who has been there for ... More
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23. For the Record: An Oral History of Rochester, NY, Newsworkers
by Bonnie Brennen
For the Record focuses on the experiences of journalists, primarily in their own words, who worked in Rochester, New York, on the Gannett owned ... More
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24. Women Journalists at Ground Zero: Covering Crisis
by Judith L Sylvester, Suzanne Huffman
Women Journalists at Ground Zero tells the rich and moving stories of 24 journalists who reported live from New York City, Washington, D.C., and the ... More
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25. PM: A New Deal in Journalism
by Paul Milkman
This book is the story of PM, an upstart New York tabloid newspaper, that from 1940 to 1948 unashamedly and outspokenly championed the causes of ... More
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