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Showing 1 - 20 of 61819 items
Quirky British author of The Missing of the Somme (DB 76938) and Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi (DB 74532)…
details his residency aboard the American aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush. Describes the people he met and the experiences in which he engaged. 2014
Chasing the truth: She Said Young Readers Edition
By Jodi Kantor. 2021
The perfect book for all student journalists, this young readers adaptation of the New York Times bestselling She Said by…
Pulitzer Prize winning reporters' Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey will inspire a new generation of young journalists. Soon to be a major motion picture! Do you want to know how to bring secrets to light? How journalists can hold the powerful to account? And how to write stories that can make a difference? In Chasing the Truth , award-winning journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey share their thoughts from their early days writing their first stories to their time as award-winning investigative journalists, offering tips and advice along the way. Adapted from their New York Times bestselling book She Said , Chasing the Truth not only tells the story of the culture-shifting Harvey Weinstein investigation, but it also shares their best reporting practices with readers. This is the perfect book for aspiring journalists or anyone devoted to uncovering the truth.
Canadian digital-marketing expert offers advice for integrating social media and personal branding into a new business model with the potential…
of reaching a larger consumer base. Offers examples of people who used Facebook, blogs, smartphones, and netbooks to successfully expand their businesses. 2009
Anne Frank: the book, the life, the afterlife
By Francine Prose. 2009
Analyzes The Diary of a Young Girl (DB 57022) as a literary work, a Holocaust narrative, and a cultural artifact.…
Examines the evidence that Anne rewrote her memoir to increase its appeal. Discusses the published book's use in classroom instruction and its adaptation for stage and film. 2009
The shallows: what the Internet is doing to our brains
By Nicholas Carr, Nicholas G Carr. 2010
Journalist Carr expands upon his 2008 article in The Atlantic Monthly entitled "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" Citing neurology research,…
he argues that humans are losing our capacity for concentration, contemplation, and reflection as advancing technology changes our neural pathways. Pulitzer Prize finalist. 2010
The best American sports writing, 2011 (Best American series)
By Jane Leavy, Glenn Stout. 2011
Twenty-nine stories selected from U.S. and Canadian magazines. Includes Patrick Hruby on the creation of John Madden's video game, S.L.…
Price's piece on a Mohawk lacrosse-stick maker, and Jason Fagone's report on former NFL star Marvin Harrison's alleged links to a shooting in Harrison's North Philadelphia neighborhood. Strong language. 2011
Idea man: a memoir by the co-founder of Microsoft
By Paul Allen. 2011
Allen, who cofounded Microsoft in 1975, traces the early years of the computer company and his relationship with his business…
partner and high school friend Bill Gates. Discusses his career blunders, ownership of the Seattle Seahawks and Portland Trail Blazers, recovery from Hodgkin's lymphoma, and philanthropic pursuits. 2011
The information: a history, a theory, a flood
By James Gleick. 2011
Author of Genius (DB 36181) and Chaos (RC 27005) chronicles the history of humanity's efforts to store, access, and communicate…
information--from Paleolithic cave paintings to early-twenty-first-century search engines. Discusses prominent inventors Charles Babbage, Ada Byron, Samuel Morse, Alan Turing, and Claude Shannon. 2011
Steve Jobs
By Walter Isaacson. 2011
Biography of entrepreneur Steve Jobs (1955-2011) chronicles his childhood, education, entry-level jobs in California's Silicon Valley, 1976 cofounding of Apple…
computer in his parents' garage, and leadership in spearheading the iPod, iPhone, and iPad. Discusses Jobs's personal and professional relationships and his 2003 cancer diagnosis. Some strong language. Bestseller. 2011
The glamour of grammar: a guide to the magic and mystery of practical English
By Roy Peter Clark. 2010
Writing coach presents colloquial advice on making grammar useful and memorable, along with examples from well-known authors. Encourages writers to…
master grammar rules--and then to break them discretely. Provides keepsakes at the end of each chapter, which review its salient and applicable points. 2010
The master switch: the rise and fall of information empires
By Tim Wu. 2010
Historical analysis of mass-communication media--radio, telephone, television, and film--introduced during the twentieth century. Examines each technology's trajectory from being free…
and open for public access to becoming closed and controlled by a single corporation or cartel led by Adolph Zukor, David Sarnoff, and others. 2010
Busted: a tale of corruption and betrayal in the city of brotherly love
By Wendy Ruderman, Barbara Laker. 2014
Two Philadelphia Daily News reporters chronicle their probe into corruption in the Philadelphia Police Department narcotics squad, for which they…
won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting. Some strong language. 2014
Computing: a concise history (MIT Press essential knowledge series)
By Paul E. Ceruzzi. 2012
Smithsonian Institution curator details the invention and development of computing, from punch cards to smartphones. Focuses on four themes: the…
coding of information in binary form, the convergence of different technologies, advances in solid-state electronics, and the interaction between people and machines. 2012
The mobile wave: how mobile intelligence will change everything
By Michael Saylor. 2012
Software-company CEO posits society is at the tipping point of the Information Revolution, which he compares to the Agricultural and…
Industrial revolutions. Explores the history of computing and the rise of mobile technologies and social networks and analyzes their impact on entertainment, commerce, and health care. 2012
Turing's cathedral: the origins of the digital universe
By George Dyson. 2012
Technology historian examines the creation of one of the first computers: the Universal Machine proposed by Alan Turing in 1936.…
Chronicles the 1945 gathering of scientists, led by mathematician John von Neumann, who constructed the theoretical machine that would later assist early weather modeling and nuclear weapons development. 2012
Why we write: 20 acclaimed authors on how and why they do what they do
By Meredith Maran. 2013
Twenty essays by popular authors on the reasons behind their pursuit of writing. Sue Grafton, author of A is for…
Alibi (DB 35069), ruminates on the source of "writer's block" and David Baldacci discusses his compulsion for writing. Also includes Isabel Allende, Jodi Picoult, and others. 2013
Steve Jobs: the man who thought different : a biography
By Karen Blumenthal. 2012
Recounts the life and career of the late founder of Apple, Steve Jobs (1955-2011). Covers his adoption and childhood, his…
friendship with Steve Wozniak, and his dynamic relationship with Apple--as chairman, head of the Mac department, advisor, and CEO--until his death. For junior and senior high and older readers. 2012
Grace: a memoir
By Grace Coddington. 2012
Autobiography of the creative director of Vogue magazine. Coddington chronicles her childhood in wartime Wales and her modeling and fashion…
career that began in 1959. Discusses her later move to America as well as her husbands, lovers, and famous contemporaries. Some strong language. 2012
Until I say good-bye: my year of living with joy
By Bret Witter, Susan Spencer-Wendel. 2013
After accepting her diagnosis of Lou Gehrig's disease in 2011, forty-five-year-old Palm Beach Post journalist quit her job and took…
seven journeys with friends and family to celebrate her life and create memories. She also met her birth mother, adopted a dog, and got permanent makeup. Some strong language. 2013
Le lecteur impuni (Papiers collés)
By Robert Lévesque. 2020
Connaissez-vous l'auteur québécois François Moreau ? Saviez-vous que le sublime Bernard-Marie Koltès avait visité le Québec à l'âge de dix-neuf…
ans, que le Bartleby de Melville avait un frère russe du nom d'Oblomov, qu'une partie des archives de Kafka a traîné pendant des années dans un appartement poussiéreux de Tel-Aviv ? Avez-vous déjà lu Jean-Pierre Issenhuth, Bernard Frank ou Jean-René Huguenin ? Et les lettres de jeunesse de Jean Genet à son amie Andrée Plainemaison, surnommée Ibis ? Ou lesCahiers de prisonde Louis-Ferdinand Céline ? À toutes ces questions de la plus haute importance, Robert Lévesque peut répondre oui, lui le "lecteur impuni", l'insatiable fouineur, jamais las d'engloutir des pages et des pages de ses auteurs de prédilection et de tout savoir à leur sujet, le moindre détail, le plus petit événement, l'origine et le sort du manuscrit le plus obscur. Tous ces livres, non seulement il les a lus, relus, annotés, mais il en a fait en plus la matière même de sa vie, l'unique objet de ses passions, avec ses trois chats et sa chère Béatrix. Et il en parle avec la verve qu'on lui connaît, ce style désinvolte, comme impatient, ce goût des digressions et des anecdotes qui font les meilleurs chroniqueurs, surtout quand ils savent, en parlant des autres, parler en même temps d'eux-mêmes, tantôt nostalgiquement, tantôt ironiquement, comme le fait ici l'auteur quand il se rappelle ses découvertes de jeunesse, ses débuts dans le journalisme, un récital de Wilhelm Kempff au Petit Séminaire de Rimouski Et tout le reste. Issu de chroniques parues dans la revueLiberté, Le Lecteur impuniest le neuvième livre de Robert Lévesque à paraître dans la collection 'Papiers collés'