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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Craig Pittman is an American journalist and an author of books mostly about Florida. He was a reporter and columnist for the Tampa Bay Times for thirty-one years before becoming a weekly columnist for the Florida Phoenix. He is co-host of the podcast entitled, Welcome to Florida,[1] and issues a weekly newsletter entitled, Oh Florida!, the Newsletter. An award winning series of articles he co-authored was published as, Paving Paradise. In 2020, the Florida Heritage Book Festival honored Pittman as a "Living Legend".[2]
He is a native Floridian. Pittman graduated from Troy University in Alabama in 1981.[3]
This nonfiction book, which focuses on a Florida court case involving charges of orchid smuggling, is the only book ever classified as "True Crime/Gardening".
According to The New York Times, Pittman's 2016 book entitled, Oh, Florida! How America's Weirdest State Influences the Rest of the Country, is a "compulsively readable", native son's view of the state he "obviously loves", in which he makes a persuasive case that Florida has an outsize influence on the national culture.[1] The book grew out of a series of articles Pittman wrote for the magazine, Slate.[4] The book, which covers such topics as driving in Florida, gambling in Florida, and sin and salvation in Florida, contains one of the earliest published uses of the phrase "Drainpipe of America". It became a New York Times bestseller. In February 2017, it won the Florida Book Award gold medal for Florida nonfiction.[citation needed]
Documents the decades-long rediscovery of the Florida panther, its election to state animal, and conservationist attempts to protect it from inbreeding, pollution, hunting, loss of food, and habitat loss. It describes a controversy when the leading panther expert, Dr. David Maehr, covertly took money from wealthy donors and then wrote faulty science papers that would give developers the green light to "pave" over natural swamps and forests needed for panther habitat.
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