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The New York Times Reader
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The New York Times Reader
Business & Economics



March 2010 | 304 pages | CQ Press

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It is not just the depth of experience of The Times reporters that makes its business coverage unique, rather it is how Times stories are framed as they’re written. Mark Tatge’s volume looks at how these reporters balance compelling analysis and historical perspective, showing students specific ways to practice the craft of business writing. Delving into the fundamentals of covering the beat, the book is divided into two sections—one on the economy (inflation, jobs, wagers, debt and taxes) and another on business (Wall Street, mergers, profiles and investigative reporting). Tatge, having spent years at such publications as Forbes and The Wall Street Journal, provides a template for how to decipher complex terminology and cut through business babble, to discover the drama and excitement of how money is made, spent, and lost.

MORE ABOUT TimesCollege . . . a series from CQ Press
Whether it is the arts or science, medicine or business, you’ll find stories that inspire while providing readers an insider’s look into the rewards, challenges and everyday routines of beat reporting. The carefully selected pieces in each Reader cover the spectrum from news to features to analysis to blogs and other online innovations. Each volume also features these elements: 

  • Conversations with Times writers take readers behind the scenes to learn about their goals for the beat and how they got their jobs, as well as practical nuts-and-bolts information on how they report and write for a global audience in the multimedia age.
  • Story Scan disassembles stories into their component parts, labeling and analyzing the elements that make good beat stories work.
  • Making Connections questions and assignments sharpen thinking and prepare students to go out on the beat to start finding their own great stories.

 
Foreword by Lawrence Ingrassia
 
Preface
 
Introduction
 
I. WRITING ABOUT THE ECONOMY
 
1. Making Sense of the Economy
 
2. Inflation
 
3. Jobs and Unemployment
 
4. Wages
 
5. Debt
 
6. Taxes
 
II. WRITING ABOUT BUSINESS
 
7. Wall Street
 
8. Mergers
 
9. Writing Profiles
 
10. Investigative Reporting
 
Notes

A useful text for business economics module.

Dr Timothy Osadiya
Business & Humanities, Seevic College
February 21, 2014

Students found the book interesting and fundamental to their understanding of finance

Dr Scott Foster
Department of Marketing, Liverpool John Moores University
July 11, 2013

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