Thirty Four 50 with host Joseph Dobzynski brings intriguing people down to earth and into the radio waves. Featuring national as well as international guests, Joseph style of a relaxed but impacted session has won rave reviews from interviewees. With a Ch
Anna Thomas is known for her film screenwriting and film producing and writer. But for us foodies she is known as the creator of a culinary style that continues to grow today. Her new culinary masterpiece Book: Vegan Vegetarian Omnivore is not on film but in the kitchen. And I can say I own her first cookbook, The Vegetarian Epicure since 1972 when I went to hospitality school. Thomas lives in Ojai, California where she continues to write screenplays and other fiction. She also teaches at the American Film Institute as a lecturer.
Dr. Tameka Bradley Hobbs is a historian, professor, author and social commentator. A graduate of Florida A&M University (B.A., History) and Florida State University, she has taught courses in American, African American, oral history, and public history at Florida A&M University, Virginia State University in Petersburg, Virginia, and John Tyler Community College, in Chester, Virginia Democracy Abroad, Lynching at Home: Racial Violence in Florida.
Anna Thomas is known for her film screenwriting and film producing and writer. But for us foodies she is known as the creator of a culinary style that continues to grow today. Her new culinary masterpiece Book: Vegan Vegetarian Omnivore is not on film but in the kitchen. And I can say I own her first cookbook, The Vegetarian Epicure since 1972 when I went to hospitality school. Thomas lives in Ojai, California where she continues to write screenplays and other fiction. She also teaches at the American Film Institute as a lecturer
Crystal Marie Fleming, Ph.D. is an author, public intellectual and expert on white supremacy and global racism. She is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Stony Brook University with affiliations in the Department of Africana Studies and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies. Dr. Fleming is the author of two books: the critically-acclaimed How to Be Less Stupid About Race: On Racism, White Supremacy and the Racial Divide and Resurrecting Slavery: Racial Legacies and White Supremacy in France. Additionally, her scholarship appears in journals such as The Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Poetics, Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race and Mindfulness. At Stony Brook, Dr. Fleming teaches undergraduate courses and doctoral seminars on social theory, race/ethnicity and qualitative methods. She is the faculty advisor to the Black Graduate Student Organization and has also been the faculty advisor to the Black Women's Association.
Etan Thomas is More Than An Athlete, he's redefined himself “The Activist Athlete.” Thomas defies the stereotype of the apolitical athlete, planting his roots in his formidable literary career, passion for mentoring and civic engagement.Born in Harlem, New York and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Thomas' childhood was surrounded by books on the civil rights movement, politics and the 1960′s. He was greatly influenced by his mother, Deborah Thomas, a schoolteacher, who instilled in her two sons to think critically and use their platform to make a difference. Etan Thomas has made his mark far beyond the boundaries of his 11 years in the NBA.His latest work, We Matter “Athletes And Activism” was released March 6th 2018, Thomas has amassed an amazing collection of interviews intertwined with the heartfelt commentary of his own to create a masterpiece. You'll read the voices of athletes, activists, media personalities, scholars, and the family of victims of police brutality. We Matter was listed as one of the top ten best activism books of all time by Book Authority. And tied for best non-fiction for 2018 by the African-American Literary Awards (AALAS)
Born in Chicago, Mary Jo McConahay is an award-winning reporter who covered the wars in Central America and economics in the Middle East. She has traveled in seventy countries and has been fascinated by the history of World War II since childhood, when she listened to the stories of her father, a veteran U.S. Navy officer. A graduate of the University of California in Berkeley, she covers Latin America as an independent journalist. Coming Sept. 18: The Tango War, The Struggle for the Hearts, Minds and Riches of Latin America during World War II Her previous books include Maya Roads, One Woman's Journey Among the People of the Rainforest and Ricochet, Two Women War Reporters and a Friendship Under Fire. She lives in San Francisco.Maya Roads earned the Grand Award, Society of American Travel Writers; International Book Awards Winner in three categories -- Autobiography/Memoir, Best New Nonfiction, Best Travel Essay Book; the Independent Publishers' Award Gold -- Best Travel Essay Book; National Geographic Traveler Book of the Month; Northern California Book Awards, Best Creative Nonfiction. For Maya Roads and other travel writing, McConahay was named Lowell Thomas Travel Journalist of the Year, the equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize in the genre. Ricochet earned a Global Ebook Award for Autobiography/Memoir
Peter Biskind is an American cultural critic, film historian, journalist, and former executive editor of Premiere magazine from 1986 to 1996.[1][2][2] He wrote several books depicting life in Hollywood, including Seeing Is Believing, Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, Down and Dirty Pictures, and Gods and Monsters, some of which were bestsellers.[citation needed] In 2010 he published a biography of director and actor Warren Beatty, entitled Star: How Warren Beatty Seduced America.Biskind is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair.[2] His work has appeared in a number of publications that include Rolling Stone, The Washington Post, Paris Match, The Nation, The New York Times, The Times (London), and the Los Angeles Times, as well as in film journals such as Sight and Sound and Film Quarterly.He served as the editor-in-chief of American Film from 1981 to 1986.Biskind's books have been translated into more than thirty different languages.
This biography tells the story of Eli G. Rochelson, MD (1907-1984), in his own words and through exhaustive research in personal and public archives. At its core is an interview Eli did with his son, Burt Rochelson, in the mid-1970s. Through letters, documents, and photographs saved by Eli and his family in America, his daughter, Meri-Jane, expands the picture of a man whose life and memory spanned two world wars, several migrations, an educational odyssey, the massive upheaval of the Holocaust, and, finally, a strenuous yet ultimately successful effort to restore his professional credentials and identity, as well as reestablish family life.
Laura Wides-Muñoz is the author of The Making of a Dream: How a Group of Young Undocumented Immigrants Helped Change What it Means to be American (Harper Books). Previously she served as VP for Special Projects & Editorial Strategy at Fusion TV, and was a staff writer at The Associated Press for more than a decade.
Jose Antonio Vargas is a journalist, filmmaker, and immigration rights activist. Born in the Philippines and raised in the United States from the age of twelve, he was part of The Washington Post team that won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Reporting in 2008 for coverage of the Virginia Tech shooting online and in print. Vargas has also worked for the San Francisco Chronicle, the Philadelphia Daily News, and The Huffington Post. He wrote, produced, and directed the autobiographical 2013
From the acclaimed author of Listen, Liberal and What's the Matter with Kansas, a scathing collection of his incisive commentary on our cruel times—perfect for this political momentWhat does a middle-class democracy look like when it comes apart? When, after forty years of economic triumph, America's winners persuade themselves that they owe nothing to the rest of the country?With his sharp eye for detail, Thomas Frank takes us on a wide-ranging tour through present-day America, showing us a society in the late stages of disintegration and describing the worlds of both the winners and the losers—the sprawling mansion districts as well as the lives of fast-food workers.Rendezvous with Oblivion is a collection of interlocking essays examining how inequality has manifested itself in our cities, in our jobs, in the way we travel—and of course in our politics, where in 2016, millions of anxious ordinary people rallied to the presidential campaign of a billionaire who meant them no good.
By the crusading pediatrician who brought the fight for justice in Flint to the national spotlight, WHAT THE EYES DON'T SEE is a powerful first-hand account of the Flint water crisis, the signature environmental disaster of our time, and a riveting narrative of personal advocacy. DR. MONA HANNA-ATTISHA MD, MPH, FAAPAn associate professor of pediatrics and human development at Michigan State University, Dr. Mona is also the founder and director of the Michigan State University and Hurley Children's Hospital Pediatric Public Health Initiative, a model program to mitigate the impact of the Flint water crisis so that all Flint children grow up healthy and strong. Find out more about the organization and its work at MSUHurleyPPHI.org.
Bill Press is one of the most Popular talk radio show host today and was named one of the most important radio hosts in the nation by Talkers magazine. Beginning his journalism career working at two television stations in Los Angeles, he has become a driving force in liberal political issues today, thought-provoking and humorous.A former co-host of Spin Room on CNN, Buchanan and Press show on MSNBC, a contributing writer for The Huffington Post, and a regular CNN political contributor. He has received numerous awards for his work, including four Emmys and a Golden Mike Award. He is also the author of 7 books
Alissa Quart is a total media author. She is the author of four non-fiction books, writes the Outclassed column for The Guardian, Alissa is the Executive Editor of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, a non-profit devoted to commissioning, editing and placing reportage about inequality.A 2018 Columbia Journalism School Alumna of the year, been a Nieman fellow, an Emmy-nominated video writer and producer, and a professor. And in her spare time she has wrote her latest non-fiction book, Squeezed: Why Our Families Can't Afford America,
Natalie Hopkinson, Ph.D. is a writer whose work explores the arts, public policy and cultural identity. She is a fellow of the Interactivity Foundation and an assistant professor in Howard University's graduate program in Communication, Culture and Media Studies. A former staff writer, editor and culture critic at the Washington Post and The Root, she is the author of two critically acclaimed books: Go-Go Live (Duke University Press), and Deconstructing Tyrone (Cleis Press She is co-founder of the Women Writers of Color brunch group established in 2012 and currently serves on the board of directors for the Hurston/Wright Foundation.Her new book : A Mouth is Always Muzzled is our discussion today on 3450
Eli Saslow is a staff writer for the Washington Post and a contributor to ESPN The Magazine. He has won a Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting and a George Polk Award for national reporting, and has been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in feature writing. His works include Ten Letters: The Stories Americans Tell Their President and American Hunger: The Pulitzer Prize-Winning Washington Post Series. Rising Out of Hatred: The Awakening of a White Supremacist by Eli Saslow
Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalist Deborah Baker's is a biographer and essayist and has wrote for the Los Angeles Times. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and awarded a Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant to complete her book, The Last Englishmen: Love, War and the End of Empire. Which is our discussion today. Her extraordinaire style of writing, places the reader into the story not just a bystander.So let's begin our journey through the Indian subcontinent at the closing of the British Empire.
Journalist Beth Macy has covered the opioid crisis as a reporter Involving herself with addicts trying to get clean. She has seen families grieving after overdose deaths, she has had discussions with heroin dealers, read drug studies and paged thru court documents. Yet thru the journey still finds reason to be hopeful with those facing addiction are attempting to build a life and a better future for themselves and their families.Her new book Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America attempts to capture the size of the crisis.
Leah Lubin:leah.lubindom@gmail.comAcupuncturist, TCM practitioner, Herbologist, retreat facilitator.
Weike Wang is a graduate of Harvard University, where she earned her undergraduate degree in chemistry and her doctorate in public health. She received her MFA from Boston University. Her fiction has been published in or is forthcoming from Alaska Quarterly Review, Glimmer Train, The Journal, Ploughshares, Redivider, and SmokeLong Quarterly.ABOUT THE BOOK Three years into her graduate studies at a demanding Boston university, the unnamed narrator of this nimbly wry, concise debut finds her one-time love for chemistry is more hypothesis than reality. She's tormented by her failed research—and reminded of her delays by her peers, her advisor, and most of all by her Chinese parents, who have always expected nothing short of excellence from her throughout her life. But there's another, nonscientific question looming: the marriage proposal from her devoted boyfriend, a fellow scientist, whose path through academia has been relatively free of obstacles, and with whom she can't make a life before finding success on her own. Eventually, the pressure mounts so high that she must leave everything she thought she knew about her future, and herself, behind. And for the first time, she's confronted with a question she won't find the answer to in a textbook: What do I really want? Over the next two years, this winningly flawed, disarmingly insightful heroine learns the formulas and equations for a different kind of chemistry—one in which the reactions can't be quantified, measured, and analyzed; one that can be studied only in the mysterious language of the heart. Taking us deep inside her scattered, searching mind, here is a brilliant new literary voice that astutely juxtaposes the elegance of science, the anxieties of finding a place in the world, and the sacrifices made for love and family.
ELIZABETH ROSNER is the author of three novels and a poetry collection. The Speed of Light was translated into nine languages and won several awards in the US and in Europe, including being shortlisted for the prestigious Prix Femina. Blue Nude was named among the best books of 2006 by the San Francisco Chronicle. Electric City was named among the best books of 2014 by NPR. Her essays and reviews have appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Elle, the San Francisco Chronicle and others. She lives in Berkeley, CA.
Donald Marvin Jones, Professor of Law, is a Baltimore native and a graduate of the New York University School of Law. He is an author and commentator who has earned an international reputation by thinking critically about important issues concerning the civil and political rights of all Americans.Professor Jones is the author of Four books which weaves together law, history, and human narratives to explore the gulf between formal equality and the social disadvantage people of color still experience in their lives. Professor Jones has appeared on PBS' Frontline, CNN's Burden of Proof; The O'Reilly Factor among other media appearances.We'll discuss his new book “Dangerous Spaces: Beyond the Racial Profile” today on Thirty Four-50
Ben Greenman is a New York Times-bestselling author of acclaimed works of fiction. His fiction, essays, and journalism have appeared in the New Yorker, New York Times, Washington Post, Paris Review, and elsewhere. His writing has His wit, insight, and honesty are as sweet and satisfying as you will ever need.BOOK: Emotional Rescue, a collection of essays on love, loss, and life with soundtrack.
Dr. Marvin Dunn taught in the Department of Psychology at Florida International University for thirty-four years, retiring as head of the department in 2006. His first book, a co-authored work with Bruce Porter, The Miami Riots of 1980: Crossing the Bounds, is the definitive work on that event.He has designed and traveled to create an extensive photo history of blacks in Florida Dr. Dunn has appeared on numerous national television programs including several appearances on the CBS, NBC and ABC evening news programs as well as on CNN, Fox News, the BBC, The Today Show, Good Morning America, Black Entertainment Television, The News Hour, and Nightline. He has also written articles for many newspapers including, the Miami Herald, the Orlando Sentinel, the St Petersburg Times, the LA Times, the Washington Post, and the New York Times. He has directed three documentary films, Dr. Dunn is the founder of the non-profit organization, Roots in the City, which hires deprived people to develop community gardens in Miami inner-city areas.
Rowan Jacobsen is the author of A Geography of Oysters, Fruitless Fall, The Living Shore, American Terroir, Shadows on the Gulf, Apples of Uncommon Character, and The Essential Oyster. He writes for Harper's, Outside, Mother Jones, Vice, Yankee, and others, and his work has been anthologized in The Best American Science & Nature Writing and Best Food Writing collections. He has won a couple of James Beard Awards, an IACP award, and some others. His Outside Magazine piece “Heart of Dark Chocolate” received the Lowell Thomas Award from the Society of American Travel Writers for best adventure story of the year, and his Harper's piece “The Homeless Herd” was named best magazine piece of the year by the Overseas Press Club. He was an Alicia Patterson Foundation fellow, writing about endangered diversity on the borderlands between India, Myanmar, and China, and a McGraw Center for Business Journalism Fellow, writing about the disruptive potential of plant-based proteins. Apples of Uncommon Character was named a Best Book of the Year by the Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, NPR, and others.
Ari Berman is a senior contributing writer for The Nation magazine and a Fellow at The Nation Institute. He has written extensively about American politics, civil rights, and the intersection of money and politics. His stories have also appeared in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, and The Guardian, and he is a frequent guest and commentator on MSNBC and NPR. Give Us the Ballot: The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America,
Dr. Tameka Bradley Hobbs is a historian, professor, author and social commentator. A graduate of Florida A&M University (B.A., History) and Florida State University, she has taught courses in American, African American, oral history, and public history at Florida A&M University, Virginia State University in Petersburg, Virginia, and John Tyler Community College, in Chester, Virginia
Anna Thomas is known for her film screenwriting and film producing and writer. But for us foodies she is known as the creator of a culinary style that continues to grow today. Her new culinary masterpiece Vegan Vegetarian Omnivore is not on film but in the kitchen. And I can say I own her first cookbook, The Vegetarian Epicure since 1972 when I went to hospitality school.
Robert Silk is the Florida tourism and airlines editor for Travel Weekly and former senior staff writer for the Key West Citizen/Florida Keys Free Press. He has also written for the Chicago Tribune and Miami Herald, among other publications. Topic and Book: An Ecotourist's Guide to the Everglades and the Florida Keys
Diana Abu-Jaber's new culinary memoir, Life Without A Recipe, has been described as “a book of love, death, and cake.” Ruth Reichl calls it “bold and luscious” and “indispensable to anyone trying to forge their own truer path.”Diana was born in Syracuse, New York to an American mother and a Jordanian father. Her family moved to Jordan a few times throughout her childhood, and elements of both her American and Jordanian experiences, as well as cross-cultural issues, especially culinary reflections, appear in her work.
If you have listen to reggae, and explore the Jamaican culture as well as Rastafari beliefs then you know of my guest, the one and only Dr. Dread We be discussing his book The Half That's Never Been Told: The Real-Life Reggae Adventures of Doctor Dread during the show today.
Political Strategist David AxelrodIf there was ever a political strategist who could be consider a transformer of government, it would be David Axelrod. David has accomplished more in 40 years of political service than anyone in modern history. He has reported on big city political machines, the emergence of the black, independent movement, and the continuing evolution of the Democratic Party. He is a regular, analyst, guest and commentator for major TV networks on political issues. His current book “Believer, My Forty Years in Politics” is on many best seller lists.
Jamal Joseph is an American writer, director, producer, poet, activist, and educator. Joseph was a member of the Black Panther Party and the Black Liberation Army. He was prosecuted as one of the Panther 21. He spent six years incarcerated at Leavenworth Penitentiary.While at Leavenworth, he earned two college degrees and wrote his first play. He is a full professor and former chair of Columbia University's Graduate Film Division and the artistic director of the New Heritage Theatre Group in Harlem. He has been featured on HBO's Def Poetry Jam, BET's American Gangster and on Tupac Shakur's The Rose That Grew from Concrete Volumes 1 and 2. He is the author of the interactive biography on Tupac Shakur, Tupac Shakur Legacy.Joseph was nominated for a 2008 Academy Award in the Best Song category for his contributions to the song "Raise It Up", performed by IMPACT Repertory Theatre and Jamia Nash in the 2007 film August Rush.
Josh Schonwald, MS is author of The Taste of Tomorrow: Dispatches from the Future of Food and a Chicago-based journalist whose work has appeared in more than 20 different publications, from The New York Times and The Washington Post to Salon, Crain's Chicago Business, and the Chicago Reader. In addition to his work for news organizations, he has worked as a writer for the University of Chicago for several years, where he has covered academic research in the humanities and social sciences for the University of Chicago Chronicle. His articles include A Fish Farmer's Tale, Future Fillet, running with the Pack, It's Not the Kit Kat Club, But It's A Living, Philosophy for ‘limited beings' accommodates approximations, From a Nursing Home, Dedication to the Arts Blooms Anew, Grandmasters in Guayaberas, The Full Montevideo, Paddles of Fire, Ice Age Trail Cometh, The Rise of Hitler Humor, Lord of the Flies, Laughs and Learning With Jules Feiffer, and On a Rolle. Read more of his articles!
NATHALIE DUPREE is the author of fourteen cookbooks. She is best known for her approachability and her understanding of Southern cooking, having started the New Southern Cooking movement now found in many restaurants throughout the United States, and co-authoring Mastering the Art of Southern Cooking. She has trained many stsudents, many of them now own restaurants, catering or other food businesses, edit magazines, have their own television shows and have written their own cookbooks.Nathalie, has won wide recognition for her work, including four James Beard Awards. She was awarded the honor of “Grande Dame” for Les Dames d' Escoffier, the highest honor for women who have excelled in the food industry. She was also named the 2013 Woman of the Year from the French Master Chefs of America, and in 2015 was named to the James Beard Who's Who in America.
Chip Kidd is a Designer/Writer in New York City (and Stonington, CT, and Palm Beach, FL). His book cover designs for Alfred A. Knopf, where he has worked non-stop since 1986, have helped create a revolution in the art of American book packaging. He is the recipient of the National Design Award for Communications, as well at the Use of Photography in Design award from the International Center of Photography. And a bunch of other stuff. Kidd has published two novels, The Cheese Monkeys and The Learners, as well as Batman: Death By Design, an original graphic novel published by DC Comics and illustrated by Dave Taylor. He is also the author of several books about comics, notably 'Peanuts: The Art of Charles M. Schulz', 'Mythology: The DC Comics Art of Alex Ross', 'Batman: Animated', 'Jack Cole and Plasticman' (with Art Spiegelman), 'Batman Collected', 'Shazam!
Dennis Dunaway was the bass player, songwriter, and theatrical conceptionalist of Alice Cooper and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2011. Their hit single "School's Out" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2015. Dennis's memoir Snakes Guillotines Electric Chairs… My Adventures in the Alice Cooper Group is the spellbinding account of Alice Cooper's creation in the '60s, strange glory in the '70s, and the legendary characters they met along the way.
Dan Ephron has been Newsweek's Jerusalem bureau chief since January 2010. Previously, serving as a national-security correspondent and deputy bureau chief for the magazine in Washington. His stories have also appeared in The Boston Globe, The New Republic, and Esquire.Killing A King: The Assassination Of Yitzhak Rabin And The Remaking Of Israel
Seth M SiegelSeth M. Siegel is a businessman, activist and writer. His essays have appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times and other publications around the world on business, political and cultural issues. Siegel has often appeared on television and has been widely quoted in major print media. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Nancie McDermott is a food writer and cooking teacher, and the author of ten cookbooks. Her passion is researching and celebrating traditional food in its cultural context, and her beloved subjects are two seemingly different places with much in common: the cuisines of Asia and of the American South. Nancie gained her Southern kitchen wisdom as a Piedmont North Carolina native, and her Asian culinary research commenced soon after college, when she was sent to northeastern Thailand as a Peace Corps volunteer.She has written on food and travel for numerous publications including Bon Appetit, Food & Wine, Fine Cooking, Cooks Illustrated, Every Day with Rachel Ray, Family Fun, Food Arts, and the Los Angeles Times. Nancie is the author of ten cookbooks and a national television food celebrity
Judith Miller is an author and a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter formerly with The New York Times. She has been a commentator for Fox News, speaking on terrorism and other national security issues, the Middle East, American foreign policy, and need to strike a delicate balance between protecting both national security and civil liberties in a post-9/11 world.She is now an adjunct fellow at the Manhattan Institute and a contributing editor of its magazine, "City Journal."
Professor Elizabeth Alexander is a poet, essayist, and teacher. She is the author of six books of poems, two collections of essays, a play, and various edited collections. She was recently named a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, as well as the Wun Tsun Tam Mellon Professor in the Humanities at Columbia University. She previously served as the inaugural Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University, where she taught for 15 years and chaired the African American Studies Department. In 2009, she composed and delivered “Praise Song for the Day” for the inauguration of President Barack Obama. Her memoir, The Light of the World, has just been released to great acclaim.
Juan Felipe HerreraJuan Felipe Herrera is the first Latino U.S. Poet Laureate. He is a poet, performer, writer, cartoonist, teacher, and activist. His's experiences as the child of migrant farmers have strongly shaped his work, such as the children's book. He creative touch started in high school playing folk music by Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie.
At the height of the civil rights movement, Jo Ivester's father moved their family to the poorest county in the nation to start a medical clinic. She was 10 years old and the only white student in her class. In her memoir, The Outskirts of Hope: A Memoir of the 1960s Deep South (She Writes Press, April 2015), Ivester tells a very personal story of her family's journey to the segregated American South.
Gene Baur Hailed as “the conscience of the food movement” by Time magazine. He has traveled extensively around the country, campaigning to raise awareness about the abuses of industrialized factory farming and our current food system. A pioneer in the field of undercover investigations, Gene has visited hundreds of farms, stockyards, and slaughterhouses documenting their deplorable conditions. His pictures and videos exposing factory farming cruelties have aired nationally and internationally, educating millions about the plight of modern farm animals.
Once in a Great City A Detroit StoryDavid Maraniss is an associate editor at The Washington Post, a three-time Pulitzer Prize finalist and a Pulitzer Prize winner for his coverage of then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton. He is what I refer to as a journalist historian writing books about our history's famous people and events.
Warren Zanes Petty the Biography,Warren Zanes, rocker, accomplished writer, musician and friend to as well as band member for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. Only could author a book about Tom Petty that is as honest and evocative of Petty's music and the remarkable rock and roll history he and his band helped to write. accomplished writer and musician who toured with Petty
After Snowden … Privacy Secrecy and security in the information age.Ronald Goldfarb is a veteran Washington, D.C., attorney, author and literary agent who worked in the Department of Justice as a special assistant to Robert F. Kennedy in the organized crime and racketeering section, and as a speechwriter for Kennedy's Senate campaign in New York. He has written 11 books and 300 articles in addition to numerous op-eds and reviews (see www.RonaldGoldfarb.com).