Gregory Paschalidis, School of Journalism and Mass Communications, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece – ‘The author has significant professional experience in EU coverage, and is thus in a position to offer an insider's perspective on the field […] The author succeeds in covering the different facets of the subject in a succinct, yet comprehensive and well-ordered manner […] Face-to face contact with distinguished professionals has its own rewards, but a well-thought out and comprehensive Handbook is equally invaluable.’Dr. Peter Anderson, School of Journalism, Language and Communication, University of Central Lancashire, UK – ‘This is a book that will be of interest to those journalists who have a genuine commitment to accuracy and getting at the full facts and who are prepared to take the time to read it. It will be of use on university journalism courses where students have no relevant modules in politics/economics as part of their programme of study […] it is the kind of book where course teams may well recommend libraries to buy several copies, e-versions, etc.’Carien J. Touwen, Journalism and Media Studies, HU Utrecht University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands – ‘It sounds very practical and I think that will serve us well. I do find the title a bit confusing, it seems to be more about Reporting on the EU and Reporting from Brussels, than EU Journalism, whatever that might be […] Most chapters seem quite complete. However I would suggest to keep the chapters on EC, EP and Council of Ministers short. Stick to the practical side of it and leave the boring ‘how does it all work in detail’ to other handbooks on the EU. Chapter on Investigative journalism should also deal with the ‘access of information’ and issues with ethics and other difficulties.’Claes de Vreese, Political Communication, The Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands – ‘The overall idea behind this book is good. It is useful to have a resource helping journalists how to ‘report on the EU’. It is true that much of the academic literature is not easily accessible and much of the official information hard to find. However, one wonders who the real market is […] Part 5 of the book is by far the most exciting one. In my view, that should be the book! This is where we –finally- transform into looking at actual journalism, the dilemma’s on when to report in decision cycle, how to link EU news to domestic politics, how to conduct investigative reporting, and how to spot some of the nonsense in EU reporting. These chapters make up about 50 pages of the book but it is really what it is all about and where the real contribution is.’