Oh, oh, and not really "journalism" I guess, but I worship at the alter of Bill Bryson. All his travels, anecdotes, tirades, and hyperbolic analogies therein.

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Oh, oh, and not really "journalism" I guess, but I worship at the alter of Bill Bryson. All his travels, anecdotes, tirades, and hyperbolic analogies therein.

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Just finished "Nickel and Dimed" and liked it a lot. Any reco's for other immersion journalism books?
It's not really my genre, so my only reading experience comes from the social work side when I was working at Mercy Home. I read There Are No Children Here by Alex Kotlowitz (which is super powerful) and couple things by Jonathan Kozol.
I really want to read Half the Sky.
I'm sure some other folks here can recommend some immersion journalism?
aldoushuxtable replied to your chat: Dude walks by as I'm sucking wind after running these church steps
#TeamThirtyYearOldButt
THIRTY IS COMING.
1: Enjoyed the dance party Friday night. 2: I have a project I'd like to undertake w/no clue where to start. I own every Esquire magazine from '03 - now (#hoarder). I'd like to bind them into volumes for coffee-table purposes. Where do libraries get their periodicals bound? 3: Can I can send them to said place and get it done?
1. Likewise.
2. We are all special in our own way. And, as far as I know, libraries either send out to commercial binderies (there's my library word Sunday. I'm now exhausted) or some libraries bind periodicals in house.
3. I think you could easily send out to a bindery, you'd just have to shop around to determine the level of fancy you're looking for--it sounds like this would make for a GREAT fancy project.
Maybe some of you fine librarian hoarding types have recommendations?