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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- It is said that journalism is a first rough draft of history.
- If so, then some news events are of such lasting significance
- that they deserve a second draft. Last January, as allied
- bombers launched a massive airborne offensive against Iraq, it
- became clear to Joanne Pello, a vice president of the Time Inc.
- Book Co., that the stream of words and images appearing in
- TIME's pages were the grist of a good book. Pello discussed the
- possibility with her colleagues and then approached us. "We
- realized that this was a subject in which TIME had particular
- photographic and editorial expertise," she recalls.
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- In the past we've published books on photojournalism, the
- presidential campaign of 1988, the rise of Soviet President Mi
- khail Gorbachev, and the 1989 Chinese army attack in Tiananmen
- Square. This idea clearly belonged to that tradition. Senior
- writer Otto Friedrich was quickly named editor and charged with
- selecting a staff of writers and correspondents to contribute
- to the book, in addition to their magazine duties. As a team of
- production typesetters rushed to work out the technical details,
- graphics director Nigel Holmes began to plan the book's maps and
- charts.
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- Fortunately -- and this is a real luxury for magazine
- journalists -- we could wait until the war was over, and events
- began to move into historical perspective, before we sent the
- chapters off to press. The result of these efforts is Desert
- Storm: The War in the Persian Gulf, a 240-page hardback volume
- that began appearing in bookstores last week. The book, which
- is being published by the Time Inc. Book Co. and distributed by
- Little, Brown and Co., contains 129 color and black-and-white
- illustrations, many of which have never been published in the
- U.S.
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- Friedrich, whose 12th book, a portrait of Paris in the
- time of the artist Edouard Manet, will be published next
- spring, found that TIME's traditional blend of detail and
- analysis served him well on Desert Storm. "I edited the book
- much the same way I have edited at TIME," he says. "There's a
- different time frame, and the chapters are longer than a TIME
- article, but the essential spirit of the thing is the same: the
- attitude of reasonably objective observers describing what we
- have seen or learned." And, we might add, enjoying the luxury
- of sufficient time to write a second draft.
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- -- Robert L. Miller
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