In the Hot Zone: One Man, One Year, Twenty-One Wars
By (Author) Kevin Sites
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
HarperCollins
1st December 2007
United States
General
Non Fiction
News media and journalism
War and defence operations
070.4333092
Paperback
368
Width 153mm, Height 203mm, Spine 24mm
424g
This book offers an adventurous, smart, empathetic look at world conflict and the future of media by a pioneer in journalism who has spent the past year covering the most dangerous areas in the world - without a crew. As Yahoo!'s first news correspondent, Kevin Sites spent the last year covering every major global conflict for "Kevin Sites in the Hot Zone" on Yahoo! News. These areas of conflict are typically left uncovered or under-reported by mainstream news organizations. Sites bravely visited each one, often without help of any kind, and this book will delve further into the dramatic stories behind Sites' adventures.The reporting on display here is gripping and unforgettable, including an interview with an ex-U.S. Marine who is also the son of Somalia's most infamous warlord; the portrait of a former child soldier in the Congo who is rejected by his family and, with no other options, may have to take up the gun again at the tender age of 13; and an unsettling tour of Rwanda's "school of death." But Sites goes beyond the stories here as well, describing his earlier career as a journalism pioneer and his vision of the future of media, one in which fearless, mobile reporters like himself regularly outdo the mainstream outlets and use the web to reach an ever-expanding audience.
"Kevin Sites represents the next step in the evolution of journalism." -- New York Post
"An essential read, especially for those who believe themselves to be world-wise or politically savvy." -- Library Journal (starred review)
"These images and dispatches form the numberless rooms of hell have an undeniable cumulative power." -- Kirkus Reviews
Kevin Sites is one of the world's most respected war correspondents. He has spent the past five years covering global war and disaster and has helped pioneer solo journalism, working completely alone, travelling, and reporting without a crew.