Edward Humes Explained

Edward Humes
Birth Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Occupation:Journalist, writer
Nationality:American
Alma Mater:Hampshire College
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Awards:Pulitzer Prize for Specialized Reporting

Edward Humes is an American journalist and non-fiction writer.

Biography

Humes was born in Philadelphia and attended Hampshire College.

In 1989 he received the Pulitzer Prize for specialized reporting for investigative stories he wrote about the United States military for the Orange County Register.[1]

Afterward, he began writing non-fiction books. Humes is the author of 13 nonfiction books, including the bestselling Mississippi Mud; No Matter How Loud I Shout; Baby E.R.; A Man and His Mountain; and Garbology, a popular selection for the First Year Experience program on college campuses.

In 2001, Humes spent a year teaching a writing workshop at Whitney High School in Cerritos, California, a middle-class Los Angeles suburb. His observations while at the school led to his narrative non-fiction book School of Dreams, published in 2004.

Humes is a contributing writer for Sierra Magazine, California Lawyer and Los Angeles Magazine, among other publications. He is married to journalist and author Donna Wares and lives in Southern California.

Books

Non-fiction

True crime

Article

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Pulitzer Prizes.
  2. News: At the Top of the Heap . The Wall Street Journal . Marc . Levinson . April 17, 2012.
  3. News: Talk Radio Evolution . Huffington Post . February 23, 2007.