About this item
The history of the fight for free press has never been more vital in our own time, when journalists are targeted as "enemies of the people." In this brilliant and rigorously researched history, award-winning journalist and author Ken Ellingwood animates the life and times of abolitionist newspaper editor Elijah Lovejoy. First to Fall illuminates this flawed yet heroic figure who made the ultimate sacrifice while fighting for free press rights in a time when the First Amendment offered little protection for those who dared to critique America's "peculiar institution." Culminating in Lovejoy's dramatic clashes with the pro-slavery mob in Alton, Illinois - who were destroying printing press after printing press - First to Fall will bring Lovejoy, his supporters and his enemies to life during the raucous 1830s at the edge of slave country.
About the Author
Ken Ellingwood
I was born along the border of my mom's homeland, Mexico, but raised mainly on the opposite fringe, in the far-northern terrain of my father, in Maine. I've spent a lot of my life thinking about borders and, in my years as a news correspondent, crossing them. I got my start as a reporter in New England, scribbling about the usual fare of small-town journalism: school board meetings, car crashes, local politics. (I once wrote about a "cow pie" contest, which, trust me, has little to do with baked goods.) But my eventual move to Los Angeles unlocked a world of big-time reporting opportunities at the Los Angeles Times, from shocking crimes to earthquakes to a four-year posting on the U.S.-Mexico border at a crucial moment--just as the Clinton administration was unfurling an unprecedented deterrence strategy aimed at stanching an epidemic of illegal border-crossing. The border beat soon had me chasing tragedy amid the desert scrub and frigid mountains of the California-Mexico divide, where smugglers were trying to skirt the new U.S. controls by steering migrants through some of the most inhospitable country in the United States. In the process of those dangerous treks, hundreds of migrants were dying, and my work tracking the deadly phenomenon led me to write Hard Line: Life and Death on the U.S.-Mexico Border.The paper later named me a foreign correspondent in Jerusalem, where I moved with my wife and our infant daughter to cover the Middle East conflict. I worked alongside the best in the business as story assignments took me to hot spots all over Israel, the West Bank and Gaza Strip--and farther afield to Jordan, Lebanon and the battlefield in Iraq. After four years, my family and I got to move to Mexico, my dream posting, where I could make use of my Spanish and my knowledge of Mexican history that I had studied in college. Mexico was descending into the mayhem of a bloody drug war at the time, and my colleagues and I covered it from every conceivable angle and location, winning the Times a number of journalism awards. When my wife's job carried us to China, I swapped daily reporting for a chance to teach journalism--real, Western journalism--to aspiring Chinese journalists. It was there that I began to look more deeply at the issues of press freedom and the struggles that American journalists faced over our own history to secure the rights we now enjoy. That topic has been the subject of my latest research--digging that I hope to turn into a gripping real-life story for a next book project. Stay tuned.
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