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Jonathan Green is an English author and investigative journalist specialising in narrative non-fiction. He is the author of two books Murder in the High Himalaya (2010) and Sex Money Murder (2018). [1]
Green grew up on the family pig farm at Glemsford, near Sudbury, Suffolk; when he was 14 the family sold the farm settling in Bury St Edmunds. [2] He attended boarding school at St Joseph's College, Ipswich, until age 18, but was unhappy with his education there and vowed to become a journalist after he graduated. [2] Years later he would return to school and in 2015 obtained a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College. [3]
Green's writing career began at age 18, when he worked for the Suffolk Free Press as an investigative journalist. [4] He did freelance work for a few years, then attended the London College of Printing. [4] He then got a break as an investigative feature writer at The Big Issue in London. [4] Since then, Green has written for The New York Times , Virginia Quarterly Review , Garden and Gun, Town and Country , the Sunday Times Magazine, Men's Journal , Fast Company, Esquire , GQ , The Financial Times , Men's Health , and The Mail on Sunday , among others. [5] He has reported in Sudan, Brazil, Kazakhstan, South Africa, China, Colombia, Ukraine, Borneo and the ice fields of Alaska among many other places. [5]
Green's first book, Murder in the High Himalaya: Loyalty, Tragedy, and Escape from Tibet (2010) [6] is about the Nangpa La shootings. [7] It is based on his article in Men's Journal called "Murder at 19,000 Feet". Murder in the High Himalaya won the Banff Mountain Book Competition in the Mountain and Wilderness Category (2011). [8] It also won the American Society of Journalists and Authors Outstanding Non Fiction Book of the Year (2011). [9] The book is endorsed by the Dalai Lama and actor Richard Gere. [10] [2]
Green's second book, Sex Money Murder: A Story of Crack, Blood and Betrayal (2018) chronicles the story of the infamous Bronx gang Sex Money Murder through inside access to gangsters and the federal agents, police officers and prosecutors who took them down. Author Jill Leovy reviewing in The New York Times Book Review said that the book is "exceptionally authentic". [11] As of March 2019, a TV show based on the book is being developed by rapper and producer 50 Cent along with producer Nicole Rocklin. [12]
Janet Malcolm is an American writer, journalist on staff at The New Yorker magazine, and collagist. She is the author of Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession (1981), In the Freud Archives (1984) and The Journalist and the Murderer (1990), among other books.
John Tracy Kidder is an American writer of nonfiction books. He received the Pulitzer Prize for his The Soul of a New Machine (1981), about the creation of a new computer at Data General Corporation. He has received praise and awards for other works, including his biography of Paul Farmer, a doctor and anthropologist, titled Mountains Beyond Mountains (2003).
True crime is a nonfiction literary and film genre in which the author examines an actual crime and details the actions of real people.
The National Book Critics Circle Awards are a set of annual American literary awards by the National Book Critics Circle to promote "the finest books and reviews published in English". The first NBCC awards were announced and presented January 16, 1976.
Jonah Jacob Goldberg is an American conservative syndicated columnist, author, political analyst, and commentator. From 1998 until May 2019, he was an editor at National Review. Goldberg writes a weekly column about politics and culture for the Los Angeles Times and holds a fellowship at the National Review Institute. In October 2019, Goldberg became founding editor of the online opinion and news publication The Dispatch. Goldberg is the author of Liberal Fascism, which became a #1 New York Times bestseller shortly after its release in January 2008; The Tyranny of Cliches: How Liberals Cheat in the War of Ideas, released in 2012; and Suicide of the West, which was published in April 2018 and also became a New York Times bestseller, reaching #5 on the list the following month.
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Ben Mezrich is an American author.
Goucher College is a private liberal arts college in Towson, Maryland. The college was chartered in 1885 following a conference in Baltimore led by local leaders of the Methodist Episcopal Church, including John F. Goucher, for whom the school is named. It was formerly a women's college until becoming coeducational in 1986. As of 2020, the school had around 1,480 undergraduates studying in 33 majors and six interdisciplinary fields and 700 graduate students. Goucher also grants professional certificates in areas including writing and education and offers a postbaccalaureate premedical program.
Erik Larson is an American journalist and author of nonfiction books. He has written a number of bestsellers, including The Devil in the White City (2003), about the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago and a series of murders by H. H. Holmes that were committed in the city around the time of the Fair. The Devil in the White City won the 2004 Edgar Award in the Best Fact Crime category, among other awards.
Joseph Ralph McGinniss Sr. was an American non-fiction writer and novelist. The author of twelve books, he first came to prominence with the best-selling The Selling of the President 1968 which described the marketing of then-presidential candidate Richard Nixon. He is popularly known for his trilogy of bestselling true crime books — Fatal Vision, Blind Faith and Cruel Doubt — which were adapted into TV miniseries in the 1980s and 90s. His last book was The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin, an account of Sarah Palin, the former governor of Alaska who was the 2008 Republican vice-presidential nominee.
Alexander Chee is an American fiction writer, poet, journalist and reviewer.
Jonny Steinberg is a South African writer and scholar. He is the author of several books about everyday life in the wake of South Africa's transition to democracy. Two of them, Midlands (2002), about the murder of a white South African farmer, and The Number (2004), a biography of a prison gangster, won the Sunday Times Alan Paton Award. In 2013 he was awarded the Windham-Campbell Literature Prize.
Mike Sager is a bestselling author and award-winning journalist. He has been called "the Beat poet of American journalism, that rare reporter who can make literature out of shabby reality."
Carl Hoffman is an American journalist and author whose work has most recently focused on western fascination with indigenous cultures, especially in New Guinea and Borneo.
Jonathan Coleman is an American author of literary nonfiction living in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Jo Becker is an American journalist and author and a three-time recipient of the Pulitzer Prize. She works as an investigative reporter for The New York Times.
Angie Abdou is a Canadian writer.
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Jill Leovy is an American journalist and nonfiction writer. She is best known for Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America, her award-winning 2015 book about homicide in Los Angeles. Ghettoside was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. It won the gold medal for nonfiction at the 85th Annual California Book Awards. It also won the Rindehour Book Prize.