best-selling Author
Tony Horwitz
Tony Horwitz died in May 2019. He is memorialized in the New Yorker by his friend and fellow historian, Jill Lepore.
Tony was a native of Washington, D.C., and a graduate of Brown University and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. As a newspaper reporter he spent a decade overseas, mainly covering wars and conflict in the Middle East, Africa, and the Balkans for The Wall Street Journal. Returning to the U.S., he won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting and wrote for The New Yorker before becoming a full-time author.
His books include the national and New York Times bestsellers, Confederates in the Attic, Blue Latitudes, Baghdad Without a Map and A Voyage Long and Strange. Midnight Rising was named a New York Times Notable Book in 2011 and one of the year’s ten best books by Library Journal.
Tony was also a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and the president of the Society of American Historians. He is survived by his wife Geraldine Brooks and their two sons, Nathaniel and Bizu.
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Remembering Pulitzer-winning journalist and author Tony Horwitz
Pulitzer-winning journalist and author Tony Horwitz has died. Best known for the book “Confederates in the Attic,” a look at modern-day southern attitudes about the Civil War and its reenactors, Horwitz also covered global conflicts for The Wall Street Journal....
Can Bar-Stool Democracy Save America?
Originally published in The New York Times, April 27, 2019 Last week I saw my cardiologist. He told me I drink too much. This wasn’t a shock. I live on Martha’s Vineyard, by the wine-dark sea, where drink animates the bleak winter months — and lays down a base for the...
Publisher’s Weekly Review: Spying on the South
Originally published in Publisher's Weekly, April 2019 Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Horwitz (Confederates in the Attic) follows the trail of Frederick Law Olmsted, 19th-century reporter and legendary landscape architect, across the American South in this...
“A tour de force of evocative history, serious scholarship, and compelling writing.”