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Library | Call Number | Status |
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Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | 921 COCKBUR | Searching... Unknown |
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Summary
Summary
A lively tour through the dangers, adventures, and black comedy of international journalism during the last two decades, Looking for Trouble features a cast of generals, drug lords, rock stars, and kings, as it tells the story one woman's career covering the world's hot spots.
Reviews (2)
Kirkus Review
A slightly better blend of Scoop and Dispatches than many memoirs by foreign correspondents. While in graduate school, and drawn by the idea of travel and adventure, Cockburn (Dangerous Liaison, 1991, etc.), now a contributing editor to Vanity Fair, joined the international bureau of NBC News. Still in her early 20s, it wasn't long before she was up to her neck in wars and disasters. Television news, especially international reporting, was still a macho fraternity, and Cockburn found herself in the uncomfortable but inspiriting role of pioneer. From Cambodia to Afghanistan, from Somalia to the Gulf War, usually behind the camera in the essential but undervalued role of producer, she has covered some of the last two decades' hottest spots. Along the way, she won a shelfful of prestigious awards and found time to have three children without most of the compromises faced by working women. For example, six months pregnant, she descended into the maelstrom of Somalia, her expanded stomach covered by an extra-large bullet-proof vest (until she discovered that Somali gunmen made a sport of testing the vests by deliberately shooting at their wearers). Cockburn never stayed very long in one place, jumping from story to story, six weeks here, a month there, just enough time to dig up a few scoops, work a new angle on an old story, and set up interviews and camera angles for the dancing-bear correspondent from New York who'd fly in for a few days to front her hard work. Because she's never in one place long enough to appreciate its true intricacies and shadings, much of her reportage here feels like intelligent tourism. She also has an off-putting flair for self-dramatization, making the moments of real danger seem oddly flat. Though the book is well crafted and full of incident, very little of it lingers long in memory. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
News junkies and folks who have never quite understood what a "news producer" does are the likeliest candidates to read this lively retrospective of Cockburn's 20 years in that position, producing documentaries and news reports for CBS, ABC, and PBS' Frontline. On the journalistic front, Cockburn, currently a Vanity Fair contributing editor, has won many awards (though a recent foray into "infotainment"--coauthoring with journalist husband Andrew One Point Safe, which became DreamWorks' less than successful first film, The Peacemaker--may have been a misstep). Now Cockburn is back on the world news beat, with behind-the-scenes stories from Afghanistan, Somalia, Cambodia, Iran, and Nicaragua, not to mention Washington, where she investigated the tobacco lobby long before most newspeople knew there was one. "People become journalists," Cockburn avers, "because they cannot decide what to be when they grow up." In Looking for Trouble, she vividly captures the mixture of knowledge, contacts, and bravado required to bring U.S. audiences stories from countries where secrecy and cover-up are a way of life. (Reviewed February 15, 1998)0385483198Mary Carroll