The press: a great and powerful tool that preceded strokes of the pen and became mightier than any sword.
With color-coded info boxes and brightly colored pages, Terry-Brown provides a sharp-looking survey that examines the history of news—how it began, how it evolved, and what consumers of all ages must consider before accepting a truth as the truth. Cool bits of history, funny hoaxes, and the scary reality of propaganda are packed in simple bites easy to absorb. For example, Terry-Brown reminds readers that back in ancient Rome, people gathered in town squares to learn the latest news, and gossip was widely accepted as fact. Compare that to the present day, 2,000 years hence, when the internet has become an accepted source of news and information, turning into the digital age’s answer to the ancient town square. The author walks readers through the panorama of newsgathering, showing its evolution from spoken news to scribes providing written reports and then how Johannes Gutenberg put the scribes out of business. Later, radio and television made global news instant. One of the more fascinating and timely sections shows how the growing popularity and availability of televisions in the 1950s and ’60s aided in the civil rights movement’s call for justice for people of color.
Excellent design and a clear narrative help readers navigate the vast and fast-changing concept of news.
(timeline, glossary, sources, resources, bibliography, index) (Nonfiction. 10-16)