Incoming Resources
- Home/land, a memoir of departure and return, Rebecca Mead
- Searching for John Hughes, or everything I thought I needed to know about life I learned from watching '80s movies, Jason Diamond
- Furiously happy, a funny book about horrible things, Jenny Lawson
- Broken, (in the best possible way), Jenny Lawson, full grown mammal
- Edward R. Murrow and the birth of broadcast journalism, Bob Edwards
- Still pictures, on photography and memory, Janet Malcolm, with an introduction by Ian Frazier, and an afterword by Anne Malcolm
- Mother, daughter, me, a memoir, Katie Hafner
- The rainbow comes and goes, a mother and son on life, love, and loss, Anderson Cooper and Gloria Vanderbilt
- Where the peacocks sing, a palace, a prince, and the search for home, Alison Singh Gee
- A man and his presidents, the political odyssey of William F. Buckley Jr., Alvin S. Felzenberg
- All about the story, news, power, politics, and the Washington post, Leonard Downie Jr
- More than enough, claiming space for who you are (no matter what they say), Elaine Welteroth ; [foreword by Ava DuVernay]
- The journalist of Castro Street, the life of Randy Shilts, Andrew E. Stoner
- Paris, a love story, Kati Marton
- Chasing history, a kid in the newsroom, Carl Bernstein
- Good Friday on the rez, a Pine Ridge odyssey, David Hugh Bunnell
- Almost Hemingway, the adventures of Negley Farson, foreign correspondent, Rex Bowman and Carlos Santos
- Reporter, a memoir, Seymour M. Hersh
- Prisoner, my 544 days in an Iranian prison--solitary confinement, a sham trial, high-stakes diplomacy, and the extraordinary efforts it took to get me out, Jason Rezaian
- Four wars, five presidents, a reporter's journey from Jerusalem to Saigon to the White House, Terence Smith
- Crashing the party, an American reporter in China, Scott Savitt
- A complex fate, William L. Shirer and the American century, Ken Cuthbertson
- Open to debate, how William F. Buckley put liberal America on the Firing Line, Heather Hendershot
- Ten days a madwoman, the daring life and turbulent times of the original "girl" reporter, Nellie Bly, Deborah Noyes
- In pursuit of disobedient women, a memoir of love, rebellion, and family, far away, Dionne Searcey
- Freak kingdom, Hunter S. Thompson's manic ten-year crusade against American fascism, Timothy Denevi
- Nellie Bly, written by Michelle Knudsen ; interior illustrations by Gillian Flint
- Winchell, gossip, power and the culture of celebrity, Neal Gabler
- Turn every page, the adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb, directed by Lizzie Gottlieb
- The reporter who knew too much, the mysterious death of What's my line tv star and media icon Dorothy Kilgallen, Mark Shaw
- My time to speak, reclaiming ancestry and confronting race, Ilia CalderoĢn
- A watchman in the night, what I've seen over 50 years reporting on America, Cal Thomas
- Foreign correspondent, a memoir, H.D.S. Greenway
- The story, a reporter's journey, Judith Miller
- My year with Eleanor, a memoir, Noelle Hancock
- Memoirs of a muhindi, fleeing East Africa for the West, Mansoor Ladha
- Belonging, a daughter's search for identity through loss and love, Michelle Miller with Rosemarie Robotham
- Paris, a love story : a memoir, by Kati Marton
- Uneducated, a memoir of flunking out, falling apart, and finding my worth, Christopher Zara
- Who was Nellie Bly?, by Margaret Gurevich ; illustrated by Laurie A. Conley
- How I saved the world, Jesse Watters
- Raise hell, the life and times of Molly Ivins, directed by Janice Engel
- A private war, Marie Colvin and other tales of heroes, scoundrels, and renegades, Marie Brenner
- Pops, learning to be a son and a father, Craig Melvin
- The imposter's war, the press, propaganda, and the newsman who battled for the minds of America, Mark Arsenault
- Cokie, a life well lived, Steven V. Roberts
- Strangers tend to tell me things, a memoir of love, loss, and coming home, Amy Dickinson
- Newsroom confidential, lessons (and worries) from an ink-stained life, Margaret Sullivan
- Fire shut up in my bones, a memoir, Charles M. Blow
- Futureface, a family mystery, a search for identity, and the truth about belonging, Alex Wagner