BetterEditor.net - Resources for Editors and Writers

Search Advanced Search
 Location:  Home / Reference / Formats / The New York Times: The Complete Front Pages: 1851-2008  
Related Categories
• Formats
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Books
• Mid-Atlantic
State & Local
United States
Americas
• General AAS
History
Subjects
Books

The New York Times: The Complete Front Pages: 1851-2008

The New York Times: The Complete Front Pages: 1851-2008
Author: Cc The New York Times
Publisher: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers
Category: Book

List Price: $60.00
Buy New: $37.80
You Save: $22.20 (37%)



Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 1043

Media: Hardcover
Edition: Har/Dvdr
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 456
Shipping Weight (lbs): 8.2
Dimensions (in): 14.9 x 12.1 x 1.8

ISBN: 1579127495
Dewey Decimal Number: 909.8
EAN: 9781579127497

Publication Date: November 1, 2008
Availability: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.

Similar Items:

  • American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House
  • Outliers: The Story of Success
  • The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life
  • Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln
  • Annie Leibovitz at Work

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This stunning and cutting-edge package provides access to the world as reflected in its most influential and respected newspaper. From wars and political assassinations to social movements and space exploration, all the news that is fit to print—or download—can be found in this extraordinary book-and-DVD set.

More than 300 of the most significant New York Times front pages have been carefully selected and beautifully reproduced in the book. Read the headlines and stories covering such world-changing events as Abraham Lincoln's assassination, Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic flight, Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech, and the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Ten foldouts present twenty key front pages at their magnificent full size. News summaries throughout highlight the most significant events of each era and put the front pages into a historical context. Seventeen insightful essays by prominent Times writers comment on pivotal moments, including "The End of Slavery" by William Safire, "Women’s Suffrage" by Gail Collins, and "The Age of Television" by Frank Rich.

The 3 DVDs include each of the 54,266 front pages printed by the Times over the past 157 years. Completely searchable and user-friendly, the disks are designed to provide access to the full stories that made front-page news each day since the paper’s founding in 1851. Click on a page—the day you were born, for example—and you're instantly transported to the Times' online archive.

The New York Times: The Complete Front Pages is the ultimate gift for history buffs, news junkies, students, and anyone who strives to be well-informed.

DVD-ROMs run on a PC (Windows 2000/XP or later) or Mac (OSX I0.4.8 or later) with Adobe 8.o or later. Free download available on the DVD-ROMs.



Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Great resource, but some days and entire months missing   November 2, 2008
 54 out of 55 found this review helpful

This is a terrific resource for history buffs. You can follow news stories as they happened, look up front pages for the day you were born, the days your parents and grandparents were born, and so on. What's great about following consecutive front pages is that you can follow not only the major stories day to day, but also the slightly less important stories that were unfolding simultaneously.

Three DVDs contain all (well, not all -- see below) front pages since the Times began publishing in September 1851. The pages are all in PDF format (one PDF file per month), so if you have Acrobat Reader on your computer, as most people do, you don't need to install any special software.

The product isn't perfect, though.

One: there are missing front pages. In fact, I've had the product for just two days and I've already found two entire months missing: May 1926 and September 1994. If you click on those months, you see the pages for the wrong year. I also saw that the front page for June 17, 1971, is missing -- which was at the height of the Pentagon Papers crisis, a very important period for the Times! It makes me wonder what else might be missing. I hope the publishers will issue replacement DVDs or a downloadable patch to fix the various errors.

Two: for some reason, many PDF files have days out of order. This is not a problem if you click on the date for an individual page, but if you want to use the arrow keys or your mouse's scroll wheel to scroll through consecutive days' pages, you can't always do that. Sometimes the first page in the file is for, say, the 19th day of the month, and then later the file skips from day 18 to another day. It would have been better if they had put all pages in correct chronological order in each month's file.

Three: when you click on the masthead of a front page, it's supposed to take you to the Times website and bring up a list of front page articles for that day. But sometimes when you click on a masthead it brings you to the wrong day's articles.

Four: the text of the articles is blurry and not always easy to read, no matter how much you magnify the text. This is odd, because the PDFs of the exact same articles on the Times website are much clearer and easier to read. It's not a problem on the front pages that are in color (the Times front page has been in color since October 16, 1997). Those are much clearer.

As for the book that accompanies the DVDs -- it's terrific. It includes important front pages over the last 150 years, including full-size foldouts of the following events:

* Lee's surrender at Appomattox
* Lincoln assassination
* San Francisco earthquake of 1906
* Titanic sinks
* Russian czar abdicates
* World War I armistice
* Scopes trial
* Lindbergh's flight
* 1929 stock market crash
* FDR inaugurated
* Pearl Harbor
* Hiroshima
* Brown v. Board of Education
* Sputnik
* 1963 March on Washington
* Kennedy assassination
* Moon landing
* Nixon resigns
* 9/11
* War in Iraq begins

Despite the missing page files, this is still a great product at a great price. Hopefully they'll take steps to fix the problems for those of us who have already bought the product.



5 out of 5 stars Wow! What a fabulous and lavishly printed treasure.   October 27, 2008
 19 out of 20 found this review helpful

The New York Times has been one of the top resources for news for more than 150 years. Despite its recent economic and editorial woes, and despite what some claim to be the declining importance of actual newspapers, I remain a firm believer in the value of daily physically printed newspapers. There is real value in having news gathered and printed on a daily basis by organizations of professional journalists. Not only do they inform the public in a more coherent way than the random impressions vibrating from the Web, they also provide a lasting record of what happened on a given day and what was thought about those events at the time they happened. You cannot rely on what we think of past events today as connected in any way to how events were regarded by those who lived them. I am very saddened to see the way the role of our daily newspapers are being diminished and am troubled that young people are not picking up the habit of reading daily newspapers in their printed form.

This lavish edition rewards its readers in several ways. First the print edition provides more than 300 important front pages of key historical events (the Emancipation Proclamation, Pearl Harbor, Oswald being shot, to name just three). While all are given at least full page printing in this very large format book, some are given a heavy stock foldout that shows the page in a more true to life format. The book also includes a plastic sheet magnifier that makes reading even the smallest print on the page much easier for those of us with less than perfect visual acuity. The book also has periodic sections that provide important photos, editorial cartoons, and mini-essays that explain the selection of the images and why they help us better understand that period in history. When the times introduced color images, the book also switches to color printing (better quality than you get in the paper).

The book also provides three DVDs with all 54,000 plus front pages that have been printed by the New York Times since its inception through 2008 (except for the periods the Times was on strike, obviously). If you are a subscriber to the times, you also can use links from these DVDs to get to the full articles in every one of these papers. However, if you don't subscribe, you have access but it is limited in period and by volume. There is a coupon for getting a subscription to the Times at 50% off for 26 weeks. If you think about it, that discount more than pays for the book (if you want the subscription to the paper).

This book is remarkable and can help you in many ways from satisfying idle curiosity through digging pretty seriously into what the Times had to say about important events for the past century and a half.

Strongly recommended.

Reviewed by Craig Matteson, Ann Arbor, MI



4 out of 5 stars The Almost Complete New York Times!   November 17, 2008
 12 out of 12 found this review helpful

I've had this book/DVD set for several days, and debated between rating it 3 stars and 4 stars. I would have gone 3 1/2 if given the option. If I had the choice to buy it again I would do so in a heartbeat despite some errors and limitations.

The big plus with this set is it contains NEARLY all the front pages ever published. I say nearly, because in just a few days I noticed some days are missing. In searching through the Lindbergh baby kidnapping in March 1932 I noticed a couple of missing dates, and also in April 1932. Since I've only checked a few hundred pages, I've got to think there are other missing pages. Another BIG problem is many of the pages are very difficult to read, as one of the other reviewers has already pointed out. Many pages are also not in the correct order for the month. I have saved copies of some front pages from another source on the web, and the pages are much clearer than many of these reproductions (scanned copies).

The printed book is done very well, although why they didn't include the Titanic sinking is beyond me.



4 out of 5 stars a great resource that throws the present product into stark relief   November 3, 2008
 11 out of 34 found this review helpful

The New York Times is currently nothing more than propaganda written by corrupt hacks with NO respect for their profession. The paper's performance as an enterprise suggests it isn't much longer for this world. But it wasn't always this way. For nearly 150 years, it was THE newspaper in America - a shining jewel. This book and the accompanying discs are a wonderful historical resource, as well as a sad reminder of how quickly generations of hard work can be destroyed by a small, dedicated group of petty tyrants.


2 out of 5 stars Eyesore   November 24, 2008
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

I returned the book since the readability of the pages was near impossible. Including a little plastic magnifying "glass" was a joke. The disks crashed my computers (HP Pavilions). All in all the expectations were great but the product was very disappointing.




Copyright 2008 BetterEditor.net