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Brad Herzog (born 1968) is an American author and freelance writer. His work includes children's books, a trilogy of American travel memoirs and other works of fiction and nonfiction, and many articles in magazines. [1] Herzog's awards include three CASE Circle of Excellence Awards for educational feature writing from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education, [2] a 2011 Annual Teacher's Choice Award, [3] and an IPPY award as one of the year 2000's "10 Outstanding Books of the Year" for his travel memoir States of Mind. [4]
Born and raised in Deerfield, Illinois, Herzog obtained a degree in psychology from Cornell University in 1990. [5] After 18 months as a sports reporter for The Ithaca Journal in Ithaca, New York, he returned to Chicago and worked as a freelance writer. He purchased a recreational vehicle and traveled through 48 states in 10 months, which he chronicled and published as States of Mind. In 1997 Herzog moved to the Monterey Peninsula, where as of 2011 he lives with his family.
Herzog's topics range from civil rights to sports car racing and from Pez to Zen, contributing to magazines such as Sports Illustrated , [6] Writer's Digest , [7] Via Magazine, [8] and Carmel Magazine. [9] He has been a contributing editor for Cornell Alumni Magazine since 1991. [10]
In 2003, Herzog wrote the first of a series of picture books for Sleeping Bear Press. [11] Herzog has written alphabet books about baseball, football, soccer, golf, stock car racing, extreme sports, the Olympic Games and amazing moments in sports.
Herzog has published a trilogy of travel memoirs about his exploration of life lessons in small-town America. In Herzog's first travel memoir, States of Mind, he turns a figurative search for elusive qualities into a literal and allegorical search with essays on 18 hamlets and their eponymous virtues. The book rose to #2 on the Amazon.com best-seller list. [12] It has since been profiled in USA Today. [13]
In 2004, Herzog published his second travel memoir, Small World (Pocket Books), a post 9/11 examination of the state of the union and the ties that bind. Once again, he examined the country's tiniest hamlets – from Rome (Oregon) and Athens (New York) to Jerusalem (Arkansas) and Calcutta (West Virginia).
Turn Left at the Trojan Horse: A Would-be Hero's American Odyssey (Citadel Press, 2010), a cross-country version of the ancient Greek epics, completed Herzog's travel trilogy. It chronicles a trek to his college reunion in Ithaca, as he re-imagines the ancient journey of Odysseus, visiting tiny hamlets with names like Troy (Oregon), Sparta (Wisconsin), Iliad (Montana), Calypso (Montana) and Apollo (Pennsylvania). Upon its publication in June 2010, Turn Left at the Trojan Horse was selected to the Indie Next "Great Reads" list, [14] as chosen by independent booksellers, and subsequently made the Indie Travel Literature Bestseller list. [15] "This is how a quest should be done..." wrote a reviewer in the Los Angeles Times. [16] He also recounts his journey in an interview on Minnesota Public Radio. [17]
Herzog's first published book for adults was The Sports 100: The One Hundred Most Important People in U.S. Sports History (Macmillan, 1995). It profiles and ranks men and women who were most influential in transforming and transcending sports in America.
In 2000, Herzog was a contestant on the Who Wants to Be a Millionaire . His latest book, States of Mind, was in the top ten within 24 hours of being mentioned on the show. Herzog's appearance and the subsequent publicity was profiled in Time magazine, [18] People , [12] and Entertainment Weekly , [19] following an appearance on the Today Show . [20]
Since 2000, Herzog is a traveling spokesperson for the Recreation Vehicle Industry Association (RVIA). [21] Since 2008, Herzog is the blogger [22] for the RVIA GoRVing website.
Travel memoirs:
Children's titles with Sleeping Bear Press:
Children's titles with Sports Illustrated Kids: [31]
Children's titles with educational publisher Rigby:
Werner Herzog is a German film director, screenwriter, author, actor, and opera director, regarded as a pioneer of New German Cinema. His films often feature ambitious protagonists with impossible dreams, people with unusual talents in obscure fields, or individuals in conflict with nature. His filmmaking process includes disregarding storyboards, emphasizing improvisation, and placing the cast and crew into similar situations to characters in his films.
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