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Local journalism is on the verge of extinction and this is bad for democracy. This book explains why.
About the author
Margaret Sullivan is
The Washington Post's media columnist and one of the nation's foremost authorities on journalism and the press. Previously, she was the longest-serving public editor of
The New York Times, critiquing the paper on behalf of its readers. She began her career at
The Buffalo News, where she rose through the ranks to become the paper's first female editor. Sullivan is a graduate of Georgetown University and has a masters in journalism from Northwestern University. Sullivan was twice elected a director of the American Society of News Editors, where she led the First Amendment committee, and she is a former member of the Pulitzer Prize board.
Summary
Local journalism is on the verge of extinction and this is bad for democracy. This book explains why.
Additional text
Named one of 50 Notable Works of Nonfiction in 2020 by The Washington Post
Selected as an NPR Best Book of 2020
“Ghosting the News is a brisk and pointed tribute to painstaking, ordinary and valuable work.” —Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times
“Margaret Sullivan has written one of the most timely books I’ve ever seen, about the biggest threat to democracy that no one is talking about. It’s that rare book about journalism that regular folks need to read.... Short yet vital.” —Will Bunch, The Philadelphia Inquirer
“To write a book like Ghosting the News is to take on the challenge of proving a negative—to make a case for the urgency of the known unknown. Sullivan succeeds. Her book is an ink-bound alarm bell. The threat Americans face, she argues, is not just the news that lies. It is also the news that will never exist in the first place.” —Megan Garber, The Atlantic
“An important book.... Sullivan is the perfect person to diagnose the problem.” —Sewell Chan, Los Angeles Times
“Sullivan aims to amplify the long-running alarm that local news media—entities core to local and national democracy—are in more trouble than ever. The greatest risk, she writes, is that local newspapers especially are on the verge of disappearing forever, which could have severe ramifications during time when fact-based reporting is under siege.” —Fortune
“Lays out the state of journalism in America, and the desperate need for its revival.” —The Guardian
“Insightful, sobering analysis of the modern news landscape.” —Dale Singer, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Washington Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan’s book about what happens to local democracy when local newsrooms shrivel couldn’t be publishing at a better time.” —Dean Miller, Seattle Times
“Smart, tight and necessary.... Sullivan’s novella-length book is a siren in the night.” —Rick Holmes, CommonWealth Magazine
“A no-nonsense retort to the notion that we live in a time of abundant information." —Kirkus Reviews
“A timely antidote for those outside the industry looking in.” —Rick Edmonds, Poynter
“Quality journalism takes time and investment to produce, and it deserves our time and investment to preserve and appreciate. Our very democracy depends on it.” —Dylan Schleicher, Porchlight Books