Simon Winchester, author, journalist, and broadcaster, has worked as a foreign correspondent for most of his career so far, although he graduated from Oxford in 1966 with a degree in geology and spent a year working as a geologist in the Ruwenzori Mountains in western Uganda, and on oil rigs in the North Sea, before joining his first newspaper in 1967.
His journalistic work, mainly for
The Guardian and
The Sunday Times, has based him in Belfast, Washington, DC, New Delhi, and New York, London, and Hong Kong, where he covered such stories as the Ulster crisis, the creation of Bangladesh, the fall of President Marcos, the Watergate affair, the Jonestown Massacre, and assassination of Egypt's President Sadat, the recent death and cremation of Pol Pot and, in 1982 the Falklands War. During this conflict he was arrested and spent three months in prison in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, on spying charges. He has been a freelance writer since 1987.
He contributes to a number of American and British magazines and journals, including
Harper's, The Smithsonian, The National Geographic Magazine, The Spectator, Granta, The New York Times and
The Atlantic Monthly. He was appointed Asia-Pacific Editor of Conde Nast Traveler at its inception in 1987, later becoming Editor-at-Large. His writings have won him several awards, including Britain's Journalist of the Year.
He writes and presents television films - including a series on the final colonial years of Hong Kong and on a variety of other historical topics - and is a frequent contributor to the BBC radio program,
From Our Own Correspondent.
His books cover a wide range of subjects, including a study of the remaining British Empire, the colonial architecture of India, aristocracy, the American Midwest, his experience of the months in an Argentine prison on spying charges, his description of a six-month walk through the Korean peninsula, the Pacific Ocean and the future of China. Most recently he has written
The River at the Center of the World, about China's Yangtze River; the best-selling
The Professor and the Madman, which is to be made into a major film by the distinguished French director Luc Besson;
The Fracture Zone; A Return to the Balkans, which recounts his journey from Austria to Turkey during the 1999 Kosovo crisis; and the best-selling
The Map that Changed the World, about the nineteenth century geologist William Smith. His book,
Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883 was published in April 2003. His latest book,
A Crack in the Edge of the World: America and the Great California Earthquake of 1906 will be published in the fall of 2005 by HarperCollins Publishers.
David L. Ulin
David L. Ulin is the author of
The Myth of Solid Ground: Earthquakes, Prediction, and the Fault Line Between Reason and Faith, published by Viking in August 2004. He edited
Another City: Writing from Los Angeles (City Lights), selected by the Los Angeles Times Book Review as a Best Book of 2001, and
Writing Los Angeles: A Literary Anthology (Library of America), which received a California Book Award, and was selected by the Los Angeles Times Book Review as a Best of the Best for 2002. His essays and criticism have appeared in
The Atlantic Monthly, The Nation, The New York Times Book Review, LA Weekly, the
Los Angeles Times, and on National Public Radio's
All Things Considered. He teaches in the MFA in Creative Writing Program at Antioch University Los Angeles.
www.californiaauthors.com/
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