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Below are some of SEJ members'
favorite reference books:
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The Academic Press
Dictionary of Science and
Technology. By Christopher Morris.
Academic Press, 1992.
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The Almanac of American
Politics 2002. By Michael Barone
with Richard E. Cohen. National Journal
Group, 2001.
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The American Medical
Association Encyclopedia of
Medicine. AMA, 1989.
SEJ member comments: useful
for basics.
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American Wildlife &
Plants: A Guide to Wildlife Food
Habits. By Alexander C. Martin, A.
L. Nelson, and Herbert S. Zim. Dover
Pubns, 1985.
SEJ member comments: First
published about 50 years ago. This is
among the most useful books I've ever
picked up.
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Audubon Field Guides:
wildflowers, fungi, birds, mammals,
fish, pinnipeds, regional, etc. Complete Audubon Book
List.
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Brownfields: A
Comprehensive Guide to Redeveloping
Contaminated Property. By Todd S.
Davis. American Bar Association,
2002.
SEJ member comments: a once
definitive book of state laws.
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Chemicals, the
Press and the Public: A Journalists'
Guide to Reporting on Chemicals in the
Community. Published by the
National Safety Council's Environmental
Health Center, 1989.
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Climate Change 2001.
Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change.
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The Concise Oxford
Dictionary of Botany. Edited by
Michael Allaby. Oxford University
Press, 1992.
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The Condensed Chemical
Dictionary. By Gessner G. Hawley.
Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 10th
edition, 1985. Later editions
available.
SEJ member comments: for
basic chemistry concepts.
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The Deluxe Transitive
Vampire: The Ultimate Handbook of
Grammar for the Innocent, the Eager,
and the Doomed. By Karen Elizabeth
Gordon. Pantheon Books, 1993.
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A Dictionary of
Biology. Oxford University Press,
4th edition, 2000.
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The Dictionary of Ecology
and Environmental Science. By Henry
Warren Art (Editor), F. Herbert
Bormann. Henry Holt & Company,
Inc., 1993.
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A Dictionary of
Environmental Quotations. Compiled
by Barbara K. Rodes and Rice Odell.
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.
Approximately 3,700 quotations in 143
categories.
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The Dorling Kindersley
World Reference Atlas. By Deni
Bown. DK Publishing, 1999.
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The Dose Makes the Poison:
A Plain-Language Guide to
Toxicology. By M. Alice Ottoboni.
John Wiley & Sons, 1997.
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Encyclopedia
Britannica.
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The Encyclopedia of
Mammals. Edited by David W.
MacDonald. Checkmark Books, 1995.
SEJ member comments: probably
the animal book we use most.
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The Encyclopedia of the
Environment. By Ruth A. Eblen
(Editor), William R. Eblen (Editor),
Rene Dubos Center for Human
Environments. Houghton Mifflin Co.,
1994.
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Encyclopedia of
World Environmental History.
Edited by Shepard Krech III, J.R.
McNeill, and Carolyn Merchant.
Routledge, 2003.
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Environmental Law
Handbook. By Thomas F.P.
Sullivan, Editor Emeritus, with
contributing authors. Government
Institutes Press, 17th edition, May
2003.
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Environmental Regulatory
Glossary. By Thomas F.P. Sullivan.
ABS Consulting, 1993.
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Environmental Toxicants:
Human Exposures and Their Health
Effects. Edited by Morton Lippmann.
Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992.
SEJ member comments: great
for detail on a few substances.
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The Essential
Researcher. By Maureen Croteau and
Wayne Worcester. Harper Collins,
1993.
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The Facts on File
Dictionary of Environmental
Science. Edited by L. Harold
Stevenson and Bruce C. Wyman. Third Edition, Facts on File, 2007.
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A copy of the state and
federal FOIA! Full text of The Freedom of
Information Act 5 U.S.C. §
552.
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A Grain of Truth: The
Media, the Public and
Biotechnology. By Susanna Hornig
Priest, associate professor of
journalism at Texas A&M University.
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing,
2000.
SEJ member comments: see
Chapter 2, Reinventing Milk (clearly
written scrutiny of rBGH story);
Chapter 6, The Labeling Controversy and
Public Perceptions of Risk; and Chapter
7, The Cloning Story.
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Grzimek's Animal Life
Encyclopedia. By Bernhard Grzimek,
Neil Schlager (Editor), Donna Olendorf
(Editor), Melissa C. McDade (Editor).
Gale Group, 2nd edition, December
2003.
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The Handy Science
Answer Book. Compiled by The
Science and Technology Department of
the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.
Edited by James E. Bobick and Naomi E.
Balaban. Centennial Edition, Visible
Ink Press, 2003.
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The Hiking Trails of North
Georgia. By Tim Homan. Peachtree
Publishers, 1997.
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Instant Notes in
Ecology. By A. Mackenzie. Springer
Verlag, 1998.
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It Ain't Necessarily So:
How Media Make and Unmake the
Scientific Picture of Reality. By
David Murray, Joel Schwartz, S. Robert
Lichter. Rowman & Littlefield
Publishing, 2001.
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Maps with the News: The
Development of American Journalistic
Cartography. By Syracuse Univ.
Newhouse School Prof. Mark Monmonier.
University of Chicago Press,
1989.
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The Merck Index: An
Encyclopedia of Chemicals, Drugs, &
Biologicals. Edited by Maryadele J.
O'Neil, Ann Smith, Patricia E.
Heckelman, John R. Obenchain, Jo Ann R.
Gallipeau, and Mary Ann D'Arecca. Merck
& Co., 2001.
SEJ member comments: the real
lowdown on particular chemicals, versus
the concepts.
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A Moment on the Earth: The
Coming Age of Environmental
Optimism. By Gregg Easterbrook.
Penguin USA, 1996.
SEJ member comments: I use
this book a lot as a primer on any
given issue.
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National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) reports, including
"Pesticides in the Diets of Infants and
Children", "Toxicological Effects of
Methylmercury" and "Understanding
Risk." National Academies
Press.
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National Geographic Atlas
of the World. National Geographic,
7th edition, 1999.
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National Safety Council's
Environmental Health Center has
some very good guidebooks on how
to cover chemicals, coastal issues and
more. Several are available in
downloadable PDF format.
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The New York Public
Library Science Desk Reference. By
Patricia Barnes-Svarney, Frommer.
Hungry Minds, Inc., 1995.
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News & Numbers: A
Guide to Reporting Statistical Claims
and Controversies in Health and Related
Fields. By the late Victor Cohn,
former science/environmental reporter
for The New York Times and
then The Washington Post. Iowa
State University Press, 2001.
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Our Living Oceans;
Report on the Status of U.S. Living
Marine Resources, 1999.
NOAA.
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Peterson Field
Guides. Houghton Mifflin
Company.
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Report on
Carcinogens, Tenth Edition.
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Public Health Service,
National Toxicology Program, December
2002.
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The Reporter's
Environmental Handbook. By
Bernadette M. West, M. Jane Lewis,
Michael R. Greenberg, David B.
Sachsman, Renee Rogers. Rutgers
University Press; 3rd edition, August
2003.
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Reporting on Risk:
A Journalist's Handbook on
Environmental Risk Assessment.
By M.A. Kamrin, D.J. Katz and M.L.
Walter. National Sea Grant College
Program and Foundation for American
Communications, 1995.
SEJ member comments: does a
good job of explaining statistics and
epidemiology for English majors.
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Respectfully Quoted: A
Dictionary of Quotations from the
Library of Congress. Edited by Suzy
Platt. Congressional Quarterly,
1992.
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RISK: A Practical
Guide for Deciding What's Really Safe
and What's Really Dangerous in the
World Around You. By David
Ropeik and George Gray. Houghton
Mifflin Company, 2002.
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Science
Communication; An Interdisciplinary
Social Science Journal. Edited
by Carol L. Rogers, Philip Merrill
College of Journalism, University of
Maryland. SAGE Publications.
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The State of the Nation's
Ecosystems. By H. John Heinz III
Center of Science, Economics, and the
Environment, Cambridge University
Press, 2002. Also available here for
downloading or no-charge print
format.
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State of the World.
Annual publication from Worldwatch
Institute. State of the World
2004; Special Focus: The Consumer
Society.
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Status and Trends of the
Nation's Biological Resources. By
M.J. Mac, P.A. Opler, C.E. Puckett
Haeker, and P.D. Doran. 2 vols. U.S.
Department of the Interior, U.S.
Geological Survey, Reston, Va, 1998. Online report
summary.
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Taber's Cyclopedic Medical
Dictionary. Edited by Donald Venes,
Clayton L. Thomas, Clarence Wilbur
Taber. F A Davis Co., 19th edition,
2001.
SEJ member comments: broad in
scope; very helpful for figuring out
what the heck those researchers, gov't
types, and doctors are saying.
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Tainted Truth: The
Manipulation of Fact in America. By
Cynthia Crossen of The Wall Street
Journal. Hardcover: Simon &
Schuster, 1994. Paperback: Touchstone
Books, 1996.
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Toxics A to Z: A Guide to
Everyday Pollution Hazards. By John
Harte, et al. University of California
Press, 1991.
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Van Nostrand's Scientific
Encyclopedia. By Glenn D. Considine
(Editor), Peter H. Kulik (Editor),
Douglas Considine. Wiley-Interscience,
2002.
SEJ member comments:The OED
of science terms.
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Vital Signs. Annual
publication from Worldwatch Institute.
Vital Signs
2003.
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Wetlands. By William
J. Mitsch and James G. Gosselink. John
Wiley & Sons, 3rd edition,
2000.
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The World Almanac and Book
of Facts 2004. Edited and published
annually by World Almanac.
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The World's Water:
The Biennial Report on Freshwater
Resources. By Peter H. Gleick.
Latest edition 2002-2003. Island Press,
2002.
SEJ member comments: for
anyone who wants global water stats in
atlas-type form.
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The Worst-Case Scenario
Survival Handbook. By Joshua Piven,
David Borgenicht. Chronicle Books,
1999.
Got suggestions
for new books or feedback on this page?
Please send to cmac@sej.org.
The Society of
Environmental Journalists
P.O. Box 2492 Jenkintown, PA 19046
Telephone: (215) 884-8174 Fax: (215)
884-8175
sej@sej.org
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