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The Fact Checker's Bible

The Fact Checker's BibleAuthor: Sarah Harrison Smith
Publisher: Anchor
Category: Book

List Price: $13.00
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Seller: Amazon.com
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 266,718

Media: Paperback
Pages: 192
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 12.2 x 7.9 x 0.5

ISBN: 0385721064
Dewey Decimal Number: 808.027
EAN: 9780385721066
ASIN: 0385721064

Publication Date: August 2004
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9780385721066
  • Condition: New
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Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - The Fact Checker's Bible: A Guide to Getting It Right
  • Paperback - The Fact Checker's Bible
  • Hardcover - Fact Checker's Bible: A Guide to Getting It Right

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The first book of its kind, The Fact Checker's Bible is the essential guide to the important but often neglected task of checking facts, whatever their source.

Today, everyone is overwhelmed with information that claims to be factual. But even the most punctilious researcher, writer, student or journalist--not to mention the lazy or deliberately mendacious ones--can sometimes get it wrong. So checking facts has become a more pressing task. But how to go about it?

The Fact Checker's Bible covers:

*Reading for accuracy
*Determining what to check
*Researching the facts
*Assessing sources: people, newspapers and magazines, books, the Internet, etc.
*Checking quotations
*Understanding the legal liabilities of getting it wrong
*Looking out for and avoiding the dangers of plagiarism

For everyone from students to editors to journalists, the methods and practices outlined in The Fact Checker's Bible provides both a standard and a working manual for how to get the facts right.



Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Sharpen your reading and writing skills   October 26, 2004
Warren Keith Wright
21 out of 23 found this review helpful

Fittingly, the descriptions of THE FACT CHECKER'S BIBLE given in the blurbs above exactly match Sarah Harrison Smith's book. Despite an enviable résumé, something in Smith's tone suggests youthful excitement---inasmuch as she still finds it exciting to track down the ten thousand details that a writer has already dug up in order to ensure that she or he has got them all right. (In literary studies, those people are called critics and biographers.) But considering the number of scandals concerning plagiarism, fabrication, and sheer audacity in American journalism during recent years, this demanding task is a necessary one---even though it is surrounded by so many legal pitfalls that it sounds like Hell, Inc.
(Her chapter on fact-checking poetry and fiction comes off as a little comic, albeit unintentionally, and suggests it is likely that she writes neither: when creating imaginative literature, accuracy is swell but plausibility is paramount.)
Far from being addressed only to colleagues in the profession, this brisk handbook will educate anyone who writes anything, and readers who wish to become better judges of everything they read---in the news, in their own area of expertise, or for pleasure. Smith maintains the fine line where skepticism does not sour into cynicism, and makes better critics of us all.



2 out of 5 stars Fact Checker for the New Yorker=Safety Expert at Chernobyl   January 21, 2005
J. Gabrielson (Colorado)
3 out of 81 found this review helpful

[...] If someone knew nothing about the publication the author worked for, the New Yorker or the others she discussed, like the NYT, the book would seem to be informative.

In reality the book itself is [...]. It would be like a book on safety published by the former manager of the Chernobyl Power plant.

If you want to get quickly to the heart of the deception(and get a good laugh); skip to the back of the book and read the parts about fact checking for TV news programs.

If you have made a serious effort to study and research the truth, the facts about current events and contemporary political debate; then you know that the New Yorker constantly lies and deceives its readers. It is little more that a trade publication for the New York left.

To put it another way.; A lawyer pleads with a Judge to be lenient with his client who has just been convicted of a double homicide, on the basis that his client is an orphan.

The authors idea of fact checking is to confirm the fact, by proper research into government records, that indeed both of the defendants parents are dead.

The fact that the reason they are dead is that the defendant, their son, murdered them is conveniently overlooked.



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