James Nestor | |
---|---|
Occupation | Science journalist Sports journalist |
Nationality | American |
Genre | Non-Fiction |
Notable works | Breath (2020) Deep (2014) |
Website | |
www |
James Nestor is an author and journalist who has written for Outside, Scientific American , Dwell , National Public Radio, The New York Times , The Atlantic , Men's Journal, the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine , and others. [1] His 2020 nonfiction book, Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art, was an international bestseller, debuting on the Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times bestseller lists and spending 18 weeks on the New York Times Best Sellers in its first year of release. Breath won the award for Best General Nonfiction Book of 2020 by the American Society of Journalists and Authors [2] and was a finalist for the Royal Society Science Book Prize. [3] Breath was translated into more than 35 languages [4] in 2022.
Nestor was born in Tustin, California, a suburb in Orange County. He described his upbringing as “lower-upper-middle class." Nestor was the youngest of two siblings. His father was a US Air Force pilot and instructor who later worked as an electrical engineer for navigational equipment of nuclear submarines. [5] His mother was a homemaker. Nestor recounted the culture of the suburbs of southern California as being "the opposite of hippy, peace, dream catchers, flip-flops, and all that. [5] [6] "
At 14, Nestor formed a straight edge punk rock band with neighboring boys inspired by the burgeoning music scene of Orange County in the 1980's. He played a three-quarters scale South Korean-made Cort bass guitar that his brother had bought at a thrift store but never used. [7] The band was called Care Unit. [7] The band released a self-produced demo cassette tape and appeared on the compilation record album, "Another Shot for Bracken" (Positive Force Records). After 18 years living in Tustin in the same house with “the same phone number, the same phone, [8] [6] ” Nestor moved to northern California to study literature and art, eventually earning a Master of Arts in English and a minor in art history at a university he described as “not really worth mentioning. [9] [6] ”
Nestor has written essays and feature articles for Outside, Scientific American, Dwell, National Public Radio, The New York Times, The Atlantic, Men's Journal, Surfer’s Journal, BBC, Reader’s Digest, the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine, and others.
Although Nestor writes primarily about science, focusing on the human body’s potential, he never intended on making journalism his career. He began his professional life as a copywriter [3] for the Kimpton Hotel and Restaurant Group in San Francisco. He later directed copy and editorial projects for NextMonet, [10] a San Francisco-based startup that sold fine art online. He directed special projects at Limn Gallery, [11] including the Limn Almanac and The City in China.
In the early 2000's, Nestor became copywriter for a federally-funded education policy non-profit foundation. Nestor described working at this agency as "the most Kafkaesque existence. [6] [5] ”; during this time he took an interest in magazine journalism.
He began pitching culture and science stories to newspapers and magazines, all of which were “unanimously and unceremoniously ignored, [12] ” until acquiring a speculative assignment for the San Francisco Chronicle Magazine on the subculture of the auxiliary language of Esperanto. Several cover stories followed including an article on big wave surfing [13] miles off the coast of San Francisco and another cover story about a group of auto mechanics who collected used cooking oil from restaurants and used it as fuel for antique Mercedes-Benz cars. [14] During this time he became a regular contributor to Dwell magazine and a columnist for ReadyMade.
Nestor continued working a full time job [5] for several years while writing during nights and weekends. “It was pure joy to take my time with these subjects, working alongside experts in the field, having strange new revelations about the world and our place in it, separating science from myths. It's all I thought about, all I ever wanted to do. Still is. [15] [6] ”
From 2008 to 2018, Nestor became a member of The San Francisco Writers’ Grotto, a private community of working writers that included bestselling authors Mary Roach, Po Bronson, Julia Scheeres, Caroline Paul, Ethan Watters, Matthew Zapruder, and several others. Being surrounded by other writers “who actually worked, some even seemed to almost make a living at it, [6] ” inspired Nestor to quit his full time job to become a freelance magazine journalist. [5] During that time, Outside sent Nestor to the Arctic Circle in Norway for a month with a group of professional surfers in an attempt to surf never-before-ridden waves. The story, “Tasty Freeze, [16] ” was published on January 5, 2010 and was nominated for the Best American Sports Writing of 2011. [17]
Nine months later, in 2011, Nestor was sent to Kalamata, Greece by Outside to report on an international freediving competition. [18] Nestor described the experience “like a new birthday [5] ” for his career and life. It was there that he first saw how these athletes could use their breath to dive hundreds of feet below the water’s surface, as well as heat themselves and, allegedly, heal themselves of chronic conditions. [19] “I couldn’t help wondering how many wondrous abilities and skills we, as a species, had lost and were losing sitting around in offices all day, [20] ” he said. Nestor vowed to spend the rest of his life researching the science behind the human body’s lost potential, and how to get it back. [1]
The freediving story, Open Your Mouth and You’re Dead, [21] was released on January 25, 2012 and generated interest from book publishers. Within a week of the article’s publication Nestor sold a book proposal at auction to Eamon Dolan [22] at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
By 2014, Nestor had published his first nonfiction book focused on the human connection to the ocean – mammalian diving reflex, electroreception, magnetoreception, abiogenesis. The book, Deep: Freediving, Renegade Science, and What the Ocean Tells Us about Ourselves, [23] was released on June 24, 2014 and won several awards. Deep has been published in seven languages.
In 2017, Nestor began working with National Geographic Explorer and marine scientist, David Gruber, [24] to research and try to understand cetacean communication. Project CETI [25] (Cetacean Translation Initiative) was launched three years later. It is a nonprofit research group that develops and employs technologies such as machine learning and Artificial Intelligence in the hopes of one day cracking interspecies communication. Project CETI was accepted as a TED Audacious Project [25] in June 2020. Nestor’s TED X Marin talk about the inception of the project, “Deep Dive: What we are learning from the language of whales, [26] ” has been viewed more than 278,000 times.
Nestor’s follow-up book to Deep was Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art, released on May 26, 2020. [27] Breath became an instant international bestseller and won several awards. Within a year of publication Breath sold more than a million copies worldwide. [1]
Nestor has appeared on Fresh Air with Terry Gross, [28] the Joe Rogan Show, [29] ABC’s Nightline, [30] CBS Morning News, [31] Bulletproof, [32] Coast to Coast AM, [33] BBC World, [34] and dozens of NPR programs. He has been invited to speak at Stanford University School of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Yale School of Medicine, the United Nations, and The Global Classroom, [35] a charity and education organization delivered by Scarisbrick Hall School [36] in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO) and supported by UNICEF, which is the “largest digital classroom in the world.”
He lives in San Francisco.
Nestor's science/adventure book, DEEP: Freediving, Renegade Science, and What the Ocean Tells Us about Ourselves was released on June 24, 2014. [37] [38] It was a finalist for the "2015 PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing. [39] " DEEP was also a BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week, [40] one of BuzzFeed's 19 Best Non-Fiction Books of 2014, [41] an Amazon Best Science Book of 2014, [1] ArtForum Top 10 Book of 2014, [1] New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice, [42] Scientific American Recommended Read, [43] Christian Science Monitor Editor’s Pick, [1] and more. Deep has been published in more than seven languages.
Nestor wrote and co-created the virtual reality experience, The Click Effect (with director Sandy Smolan). It was released by the New York Times and Within on April 18, 2016, [44] and is about the efforts of two freelance freediving researchers attempting to understand the language of dolphins and whales. The Click Effect was an official selection of a number of film festivals including the Sundance Film Festival [45] and the Tribeca Film Festival. [46] [1]
In May 2020, Nestor published Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art through Riverhead/Penguin Random House. [47] [48] The book explores how the human species has lost the ability to breathe properly, shifting from the natural state of nasal breathing to chronic mouth breathing. Nestor explores research that argues that this shift (due to the increased consumption of processed foods) has led to a rise in snoring, sleep apnea, asthma, autoimmune disease, and allergies. He also worked with scientists at Stanford University whose research suggests that returning to a state of nasal breathing and adopting other healthy breathing habits such as taking slow, deep breaths in a rhythmic pattern, will improve an individual's health. [49] [50] [51]
In the June 14, 2020 edition of the New York Times (one week after its release), Breath ranked #7 in the "Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction list. [52] " That same week, Breath was listed a bestseller in the Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times . Breath spent 18 weeks [53] on the New York Times bestseller in Spain, Germany, [1] Italy, and Croatia [54] and has sold more than a million copies worldwide. [6] Breath will be translated into more than 35 languages, including Mongolian and Slovakian, in 2021 and 2022.
In May 2020, Breath was awarded the Best General Nonfiction Book of 2020 by the American Society of Journalists and Authors. [55] In October 2021, Breath was listed as a finalist for the Royal Society Science Book Prize of 2021. [3]
George Catlin was an American lawyer, painter, author, and traveler, who specialized in portraits of Native Americans in the American frontier.
Freediving, free-diving, free diving, breath-hold diving, or skin diving is a form of underwater diving that relies on breath-holding until resurfacing rather than the use of breathing apparatus such as scuba gear.
Mouth breathing, medically known as chronic oral ventilation, is long-term breathing through the mouth. It often is caused by an obstruction to breathing through the nose, the innate breathing organ in the human body. Chronic mouth breathing may be associated with illness. The term "mouth-breather" has developed a pejorative slang meaning.
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Obligate nasal breathing describes a physiological necessity to breathe through the nose as opposed to breathing through the mouth.
Emma Farrell is a British freediving instructor, and the author of the book One breath: A Reflection on Freediving. She started freediving in 2001 and has been teaching since 2002. She was head of instruction at the UK's DeeperBlue freediving club from 2004 until her resignation in 2009; she now runs her own freediving training company, GoFreediving, which teaches the SSI freediving programme. In 2007, she was stated to be one of only ten freediving instructor trainers in the world. Emma has explained that control over one's own mind and self-relaxation are key to free diving.
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Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art is a 2020 popular science book by science journalist James Nestor. The book provides a historical, scientific and personal examination of breathing, with a specific interest in contrasting the differences between mouth breathing and nasal breathing. The book became an international bestseller, selling over two million copies worldwide.
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