Eli Saslow | |
---|---|
Born | Littleton, Colorado, U.S. | May 15, 1982
Education | Syracuse University |
Occupation | Sportscaster Screenwriter [1] |
Years active | 2004–present |
Employer(s) | The Washington Post ESPN The Magazine |
Awards | Pulitzer Prize (2014, 2023) George Polk award (2013, 2020) Dayton Literary Peace Prize (2019) |
Eli Eric Saslow (born May 15, 1982) is an American journalist, currently a writer-at-large for The New York Times . [2] He has also written for The Washington Post and ESPN The Magazine . He is a 2014 and a 2023 winner of the Pulitzer Prize, a recipient of the George Polk award and other honors. He was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in feature writing in 2013, 2016 and 2017. [3] He is a Writers Guild of America screenwriter, and the co-writer for Four Good Days , which stars Mila Kunis and Glenn Close and was nominated for an Academy Award. [4] [5] He has published three books, including the best-selling Rising Out of Hatred, which won the 2019 Dayton Literary Peace Prize. [6]
He attended Heritage High School, in Littleton, Colorado, graduating in 2000, [7] [8] and is a 2004 graduate of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. [9]
Saslow's 2018 book Rising Out of Hatred: The Awakening of a Former White Nationalist was the winner of the 2019 Dayton Literary Peace Prize for Nonfiction. [10]
He is the author of Ten Letters: The Stories Americans Tell Their President (Random House, 2012), and four of his works have appeared in the anthology The Best American Sports Writing . [11] [12]
Saslow is married and lives in Portland, Oregon. He has three children. [13]
Karen Louise Erdrich is a Native American author of novels, poetry, and children's books featuring Native American characters and settings. She is an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians of North Dakota, a federally recognized tribe of Ojibwe people.
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Milena Markovna "Mila" Kunis is an American actress. Born in Chernivtsi, Ukraine, and raised in Los Angeles, she began playing Jackie Burkhart on the Fox television series That '70s Show (1998–2006) at age 15. She has voiced Meg Griffin on the Fox animated series Family Guy since 1999.
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The Dayton Literary Peace Prize is an annual United States literary award "recognizing the power of the written word to promote peace" that was first awarded in 2006. Awards are given for adult fiction and non-fiction books published at some point within the immediate past year that have led readers to a better understanding of other peoples, cultures, religions, and political views, with the winner in each category receiving a cash prize of $10,000. The award is an offshoot of the Dayton Peace Prize, which grew out of the 1995 peace accords ending the Bosnian War. In 2011, the former "Lifetime Achievement Award" was renamed the Richard C. Holbrooke Distinguished Achievement Award with a $10,000 honorarium.
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Eli Sanders is an American journalist based in Seattle, Washington and was the Associate Editor of The Stranger until September 2020. He won the Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing in 2012. His win was the first and only Pulitzer ever awarded to The Stranger, and only the seventh time a Pulitzer had been awarded to an alternative newsweekly. The Pulitzer jurors recognized Sanders for "his haunting story of a woman who survived a brutal attack that took the life of her partner, using the woman's brave courtroom testimony and the details of the crime to construct a moving narrative." Sanders also hosted a weekly political podcast for The Stranger, the Blabbermouth Podcast.
Four Good Days is a 2020 American drama film, directed and produced by Rodrigo García, from a screenplay by García and Eli Saslow, based upon Saslow's 2016 Washington Post article "How's Amanda? A Story of Truth, Lies and an American Addiction". It stars Glenn Close, Mila Kunis, and Stephen Root.