Kevin Baker (author)
American novelist (born 1958) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kevin Baker (born 1958) is an American novelist, political commentator, and journalist.
Kevin Baker | |
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![]() Baker in 2015 | |
Born | 1958 (age 66–67)[1] Englewood, New Jersey, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Education | Columbia University |
Genre | Realistic fiction, historical fiction, Nonfiction |
Website | |
kevinbaker |
Early life
Baker was born in Englewood, New Jersey,[1] and grew up in Rockport, Massachusetts.[2][3] As a youth, he worked on the local newspaper Gloucester Daily Times,[1] covering high school sports, as well as town meetings and other civic affairs. He graduated from Columbia University in 1980,[1] with a major in political science.[2]
Career
Summarize
Perspective
In 1993, Baker's first book, Sometimes You See it Coming (1993),[1] a contemporary baseball novel loosely based on the life of Ty Cobb, was published.[2]
He was the chief historical researcher on Harold Evans’s illustrated history of the United States, The American Century (1998).[4] He was a columnist ("In the News") for American Heritage magazine from 1998 to 2007.[5] In 2009 appeared on C-SPAN's Washington Journal and The Colbert Report, to discuss the Obama presidency.[6]
Baker is the author of the City of Fire trilogy, published by HarperCollins, which consists of the following historical novels: Dreamland (1999); the bestselling Paradise Alley (2002); and Strivers Row (2006). The middle volume of the trilogy won the 2003 James Fenimore Cooper Prize for Best Historical Fiction[7] and the 2003 American Book Award.[8] Paradise Alley was also chosen by bestselling Angela's Ashes author, Frank McCourt, as a Today show book club selection.
In 2009, he wrote Luna Park, a graphic novel illustrated by Croatian artist Danijel Žeželj.[9]
A writer of over 200 newspaper and magazine articles, Baker was the recipient of a 2017 Guggenheim fellowship for non-fiction.
Baker lives in New York City, where he is a contributing editor to and bi-monthly columnist for Harper's Magazine,[5] and a regular contributor to Politico.com, The New Republic, The New York Times, and The New York Times Book Review.
Bibliography
- Sometimes You See It Coming (1993)
- The American Century (1998; with Harold Evans and Gail Buckland)
- Dreamland (1999)
- Paradise Alley (2002)
- “Rudy Giuliani and the Myth of Modern New York” (2005; in America's Mayor: The Hidden History of Giuliani's New York)
- “Lost-Found Nation: The Last Meeting Between Elijah Muhammad and W.D. Fard" (2006; in I Wish I'd Been There)
- Strivers Row (2006)
- Luna Park (2011; with artist Danijel Žeželj)
- The Big Crowd (2013)
- Becoming Mr. October (2014)
- America The Ingenious: How a nation of dreamers, immigrants, and tinkerers changed the world (2016)
References
Further reading
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