Xlibris Corporation
Home FAQs About Xlibris Contact Us



Home Bookstore Book Display

 January 7, 2009

 Author's
 Lounge


 Bookstore
 Home

   Book Display
     Author Display
     Contact Author

 Search

 Browse

 Bookstore
 FAQs

Evolution of a Columnistthe 40-year intellectual journey of America's senior nationally syndicated environmental commentator

Evolution of a Columnist

  by Edward Flattau
  ISBN13: 978-1-4134-0354-1 (Trade Paperback)
  ISBN: 1-4134-0354-9 (Trade Paperback)
  ISBN13: 978-1-4134-0355-8 (Hardback)
  ISBN: 1-4134-0355-7 (Hardback)
  Pages: 438
  Subject: NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection
  Subject: CURRENT EVENTS / General

Availability
Paperback prices reflect 15% discount off retail
Hardback prices reflect 10% discount off retail

Trade Paperback  $21.24
Hardback  $31.49

 

Description

The book chronicles the intellectual journey of Ed Flattau, the only nationally syndicated environmental columnist writing on a continuous basis for American newspapers since the early 1970s’. Through a chronological compilation of writings dealing with issues, people, places, and events, the book charts the course of his thinking and how it shaped his career. This includes personal reflections on journalism, politics, and the environment that take the reader from the author’s formative stage in the 1960s’ to the present day.

The book describes how a prize-winning columnist deals with the inevitable contradictions and challenges of his subject matter, and conveys a sense of the steady growth of the environmental movement’s national influence since the 1970 celebration of the first Earth Day.

Flattau’s twice-a-week environmental column has appeared in as many as 120 daily newspapers at various times during the past three decades. He has won ten national journalism awards, reported from five different continents, and shined a spotlight on the key environmental issues and the movement’s principle players. In addition to being published in the nation’s leading newspapers and periodicals, many of Flattau’s writings have been far ahead of their time. Perhaps one of the book’s most striking revelations is that we continue to make many of the same correctable environmental mistakes of 30 years ago.

“Evolution of a Columnist” is a unique sort of journalistic memoir. Few if any columnists have gone about telling their stories directly through the development of their thought processes. As an added inducement, the book contains refutations of the right-wing polemical tracts and talk-show claims that have recently flooded the marketplace; and while many journalists have given President George W. Bush a free pass, Flattau is not one of them.

The book should appeal to academic and general audiences interested in what it takes to be a columnist. The progression of environmental history as witnessed through the eyes of a journalist with a front row seat should also draw readers. Flattau’s book consists of approximately 90,000 words.

From “Environment Writer” Newsletter February 2004: Syndicated Columnist Ed Flattau Recants 40-Year ´Intellectual Journey´ Environmental columnist Edward Flattau was, so to speak, there at the beginning. Not quite at the signing of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and 1970 passage of the landmark Clean Air Act ... but certainly pretty soon thereafter. Early enough to catch the bulk of what President Richard Nixon had decreed "The Environmental Decade." A fixture in the Washington, D.C., environmental journalism community practically since the first international Earth Day, Flattau lays claim to being the nation´s most enduring nationally syndicated environmental columnist. A UPI Washington, D.C., reporter before taking over the twice-weekly syndicated column first launched by Stewart Udall, President John F. Kennedy´s Interior Secretary, Flattau has been opining ever since. At one point in his career, though not recently, his column was carried in scores of newspapers across the country. Flattau recounts his "40-year intellectual journey" in a new 435-page paperback Evolution of a Columnist, published by Global Horizons Press, through which for years he has been syndicating his column. Flattau´s balancing act -- between advocate and journalist -- is no mean trick, and not all may agree with the cover plug he receives from former Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau Chief Jack Nelson that he has succeeded in always writing "with the passion of an environmentalist, but ... with a journalist´s reverence for the facts." Make no mistake about it: Flattau takes no prisoners. Initially distributed by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate and then, from 1977 until 1985, by Artists and Writers Syndicate, Flattau´s countless columns offer a birds-eye view, albeit from an "inside-the-Beltway" perspective, of the U.S.´s four-plus decades of environmental law and regulation. Like most good columnists, Flattau didn´t spare words in dissing those whose judgments he questioned: "President Nixon had the last laugh on the country: Gerald Ford," he wrote in 1974. And two years this zinger: "President Ford is simply a Nixon without the curse of dishonesty or the virtue of above-average intelligence." And in 1981 this one: Reagan was rambling in his press conference yesterday, except for a few brief coherent periods when he was downright scary." If you´re getting the point that not all of Flattau´s opinions dealt solely with environmental issues, you´re right. But in was in the environmental policy area that he scored most of his points, and there too his views were consistently aligned with the liberal and progressive and environmentalist perspectives. He takes pride, in this, his second book, "in being prescient" and flagging issues "of profound importance" but as yet unrecognized by newspapers or society in general. "Yet, all too often, I experienced frustration with how little headway was made, despite the presence of known remedial alternatives." The book itself reprints numerous extensive excerpts, or full texts, of many Flattau columns, in some cases along with a postscript to update them. Writing four days after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, Flattau is quick to conclude that "we need to retaliate militarily against those who masterminded the bombings." He argues that the environmental dimension involves subsequently upgrading the living conditions of those impoverished, a step he says "will go a long way towards shrinking professional terrorists´ pool of prospective operatives." "While environmental enhancement has the potential to diminish terrorism in the Middle East, disregard of environmental concerns stands to exacerbate violence," Flattau wrote in that column, "especially as tensions rise over allocation of relatively scarce supplies of fresh water." Flattau´s regular bylined column is seen few and far between in newspapers these days, he says because he no longer aggressively markets it and instead spends time writing books. "I am not aware of any regular nationally syndicated environmental columnist emerging to pick up the slack," he allows. "In fact, the only daily newspaper I see that regularly runs at least three or more environmental op-ed pieces (albeit from different authors) a week is the Washington Times. I find most of the pieces repugnant from an ideological standpoint, but at least they are paying attention." Why no such regular advocacy column? "My guess is the same old story," he says. "Editors failing to connect the dots between environmental issues and the daily quality of life, publishers´ hostility to a movement that often puts off advertisers, a lack of understanding of just how pervasive environmental issues are, and underestimating readership interest in the topics." For environmental columnist-wannabes eager to fill Flattau´s aging shoes, his book is bound to provide useful and timeless insights. It will be of great value also to environmental historians, recognizing Flattau´s indelible personal spin on the issues he addresses. Evolution of a Columnist: The 40-Year Intellectual Journey of America´s Senior Nationally Syndicated Environmental Columnist, by Edward Flattau, $24.99 in paper (1-4134-0354-9), $34.99 in cloth hardback (1-4134-0355-7). Available in major bookstores, from Amazon.com, or by calling 1-888-795-4274, ext. 276. February 2004 Environment Writer Metcalf Institute for Marine and Environmental Reporting University of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography Office of Marine Programs Narragansett, RI 02882 Tel: 401-874-6211; Fax: 401-874-6485 E-mail: info@environmentwriter.org Disclaimer * Copyright 2002-2004 * All rights reserved. * University of Rhode Island


Click here to read an excerpt from the book.





 
| | | | |