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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Christie Wilcox , Bethany Brookshire , Jason G. GoldmanPublisher: Yale University Press Imprint: Yale University Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.318kg ISBN: 9780300197556ISBN 10: 0300197551 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 03 May 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsThis collection of essays and tips, wisdom and insight on science blogging should be considered a must-read. From its all-star editors to its remarkable contributors, Science Blogging: The Essential Guide offers a range of information suited to everyone from those curious about starting a blog to practitioners looking for ways to improve. The word 'essential' is often overused but in this case, it suits perfectly. -Deborah Blum, Director of Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT and author of the Poison Pen blog for the New York Times -- Deborah Blum Want to learn how to launch a blog, nurture an audience, and-gasp-get paid for it? Read this book. Everyone, from neophyte to veteran, will learn from the Who's Who of science blogger contributors. -Ivan Oransky, cofounder of Retraction Watch -- Ivan Oransky Once upon a time, science blogging was imagined to be a distraction from the serious business of Real Journalism(TM). Now it is journalism, and much more besides. This new collection offers a well written, rigorous, and timely atlas to its diverse approaches and best practices. Aspiring and veteran bloggers alike, take note: good stuff here. -Thomas Levenson, MIT Graduate Program in Science Writing, and author of The Hunt for Vulcan -- Thomas Levenson Like the medium it covers, Science Blogging is by turns pragmatic, charming, wide ranging, and sharply argued. This is the guidebook science blogging deserves, and that every science blogger needs to read. -Thomas Hayden, coeditor of The Science Writers' Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Pitch, Publish, and Prosper in the Digital Age -- Thomas Hayden [Science Blogging] offers practical advice on such matters as 'blogging about controversial topics' and 'persuading the unpersuadable.' For example: Always link to the relevant research, avoid 'muppet flailing' (excessive fervor, I gather) and 'don't let the trolls get you down.' Words not just to blog but to live by. -James Ryerson, New York Times Book Review -- James Ryerson New York Times Book Review This collection of essays and tips, wisdom and insight on science blogging should be considered a must-read. From its all-star editors to its remarkable contributors, Science Blogging: The Essential Guide offers a range of information suited to everyone from those curious about starting a blog to practitioners looking for ways to improve. The word 'essential' is often overused but in this case, it suits perfectly. -Deborah Blum, Director of Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT and author of the Poison Pen blog for the New York Times -- Deborah Blum Want to learn how to launch a blog, nurture an audience, and-gasp-get paid for it? Read this book. Everyone, from neophyte to veteran, will learn from the Who's Who of science blogger contributors. -Ivan Oransky, cofounder of Retraction Watch -- Ivan Oransky Once upon a time, science blogging was imagined to be a distraction from the serious business of Real Journalism(TM). Now it is journalism, and much more besides. This new collection offers a well written, rigorous, and timely atlas to its diverse approaches and best practices. Aspiring and veteran bloggers alike, take note: good stuff here. -Thomas Levenson, MIT Graduate Program in Science Writing, and author of The Hunt for Vulcan -- Thomas Levenson Like the medium it covers, Science Blogging is by turns pragmatic, charming, wide ranging, and sharply argued. This is the guidebook science blogging deserves, and that every science blogger needs to read. -Thomas Hayden, coeditor of The Science Writers' Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Pitch, Publish, and Prosper in the Digital Age -- Thomas Hayden [Science Blogging] offers practical advice on such matters as 'blogging about controversial topics' and 'persuading the unpersuadable.' For example: Always link to the relevant research, avoid 'muppet flailing' (excessive fervor, I gather) and 'don't let the trolls get you down.' Words not just to blog but to live by. -James Ryerson, New York Times Book Review -- James Ryerson New York Times Book Review An important and valuable guide for aspiring science writers of all stripes ... approachable and insightful. -Andrew David Thaler, Science -- Andrew David Thaler Science Comprehensive and informative ... [Science Blogging] can benefit and be appreciated by both novice and experienced science writers. -Diane Martinez, Technical Communication -- Diane Martinez Technical Communication This collection of essays and tips, wisdom and insight on science blogging should be considered a must-read. From its all-star editors to its remarkable contributors, Science Blogging: The Essential Guide offers a range of information suited to everyone from those curious about starting a blog to practitioners looking for ways to improve. The word 'essential' is often overused but in this case, it suits perfectly. -Deborah Blum, Director of Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT and author of the Poison Pen blog for the New York Times -- Deborah Blum Want to learn how to launch a blog, nurture an audience, and-gasp-get paid for it? Read this book. Everyone, from neophyte to veteran, will learn from the Who's Who of science blogger contributors. -Ivan Oransky, cofounder of Retraction Watch and Distinguished Writer in Residence, New York University -- Ivan Oransky Once upon a time, science blogging was imagined to be a distraction from the serious business of Real Journalism(TM). Now it is journalism, and much more besides. This new collection offers a well written, rigorous, and timely atlas to its diverse approaches and best practices. Aspiring and veteran bloggers alike, take note: good stuff here. -Thomas Levenson, MIT Graduate Program in Science Writing, and author of The Hunt for Vulcan -- Thomas Levenson Like the medium it covers, Science Blogging is by turns pragmatic, charming, wide ranging, and sharply argued. This is the guidebook science blogging deserves, and that every science blogger needs to read. -Thomas Hayden, coeditor of The Science Writers' Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Pitch, Publish, and Prosper in the Digital Age -- Thomas Hayden Good blogging, then, is a perverse and fiddly act of balancing the freedom to express yourself with the restraint that will make you readable ... The only constant-the only tip that always applies-is to have something to write, and to write it well. -Ed Yong, Not Exactly Rocket Science -- Ed Yong Author InformationChristie Wilcox blogs at Science Sushi, hosted by Discover. Bethany Brookshire writes Scicurious, hosted by Science News, and Eureka! Lab, hosted by Society for Science & the Public. Jason G. Goldman has written blogs for Scientific American, Conservation Magazine, Earth Touch News, io9, and more. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |