Jack Hitt | |
Birth Date: | 1957 |
Birth Place: | Charleston, South Carolina |
Occupation: | Author, editor, journalist |
Language: | English |
Nationality: | American |
Citizenship: | United States |
Alma Mater: | The University of The South |
Genres: | --> |
Subjects: | --> |
Notablework: | --> |
Spouse: | Lisa Sanders |
Children: | 2 |
Awards: | Livingston Award, two Peabody Awards |
Jack Hitt is an American author. He has been a contributing editor to Harper's, The New York Times Magazine, This American Life, and the now-defunct magazine Lingua Franca. His work has appeared in such publications as Outside Magazine, Rolling Stone, Wired, Mother Jones, Slate, and Garden & Gun.
In 1990, he received the Livingston Award, along with Paul Tough, for an article they wrote about computer hackers that was published in Esquire. Hitt has written and edited multiple books, and has had articles selected for inclusion in Best American Science Writing 2006, Best American Travel Writing 2005, and in Ira Glass's The New Kings of Nonfiction (2007). In 2006, an episode of This American Life that Hitt contributed to called "Habeus Schmabeus" won a Peabody Award. Hitt also co-hosted the Gimlet Media Podcast Uncivil along with Chenjerai Kumanyiki between 2017 and 2018. Uncivil won a Peabody award in 2017 for the episode titled "The Raid".
John T. L. "Jack" Hitt was born in 1957 in Charleston, South Carolina to Ann Leonard Hitt and Robert Hitt Jr. He was the youngest of five children. He was raised in Charleston and attended the Porter-Gaud School. At Porter-Gaude, Hitt got his start in writing by contributing to and editing the school's literary magazine. While growing up in Charleston, Hitt lived in the same neighborhood as Dawn Langley Simmons who would receive one of the first sex reassignment surgeries in the United States.
Hitt attended the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee where he majored in comparative literature. As an undergrad, he worked at the Learning Disabilities Center and taught math and English to teens and children. He also tutored Latin. He was president of the Spanish House and a member of the Spanish Honor Society.
It was at Sewanee that Hitt first heard about the road to Santiago de Compostela. He would write about the experience of walking the road in his first book, Off The Road: A Modern-Day Walk Down the Pilgrim's route into Spain.
Hitt graduated from the University of the South in 1979.
"I was nearly a Latin professor", said Hitt in an interview with The Atlantic. "Upon graduation, my Classics teacher warned me that while I'd read the hundred or so greatest works of Latin literature, post-graduate work meant reading the 1,000 'eh' works of Latin literature...I seized my diploma and I've never translated a line of Latin since."
Hitt lived in an apartment in New York City for about 8 years before he met and married his current wife Lisa Sanders in the late 1980s. They live together in New Haven, Connecticut and have two daughters.
Jack Hitt's older brother Robert M. Hitt III served as Secretary of Commerce for the state of South Carolina from January 2011 to June 2021.
Hitt has been a contributing editor to Harper's, The New York Times Magazine, This American Life, and Lingua Franca. He has also had articles published in Mother Jones, Slate, the Smithsonian, Discover Magazine, Rolling Stone, GQ, Wired, Garden & Gun, and Outside Magazine.
Hitt's New York Times Magazine piece about a dying language called "Say No More" was selected for inclusion in The Best American Travel Writing 2005. A piece originally published in Harper's titled "Mighty White of You: Racial Preferences Color America's Oldest Skulls and Bones" was selected for inclusion in Best American Science Writing 2006. Another piece from Harper's titled "Toxic Dreams: A California Town Finds Meaning in an Acid Pit", was included in Ira Glass's The New Kings of Nonfiction (2007).
Jack Hitt and Paul Tough won a Livingston award for an article published in Esquire they wrote about Hackers titled "Terminal Delinquents."
Since 1996, Hitt has also been a contributing editor to the radio series This American Life. Showrunner Ira Glass wrote an announcement for Hitt's show that included a listing of what he considered to be stand out episodes of This American Life that Hitt had contributed to. That list included: "Fiasco," a story about a production of Peter Pan gone wrong; "The Super," a story about a superintendent Hitt had in New York City who was a former member of a Brazilian death squad; "Dawn," a story about his Charleston neighbor Dawn Langley Simmons (an early recipient of sex reassignment surgery); "The Middle of Nowhere," a story about the small pacific island of Nauru; and "Habeas Schmabeas," a story that contained multiple interviews with prisoners who had served time at Guantanamo Bay.
This American Life won a Peabody Award in 2006 for "Habeas Schmabeas."
Between 2017 and 2018, Hitt co-hosted the Gimlet Media podcast Uncivil along with Chenjerai Kumanyika. The episode of Uncivil titled "The Raid" won a Peabody award in 2017.
Hitt was a regular US correspondent on Nine to Noon, hosted by Kathryn Ryan on Radio New Zealand National.
In 2012, Hitt was interviewed on The Colbert Report about his novel Bunch of Amateurs: A Search for the American Character.
Between 2012 and 2013, Hitt performed a one-man show he wrote about his childhood and the outlandish characters he's met in his life called Making Up The Truth.
Jack Hitt and Paul Tough are both listed as consultants for the movie Hackers (1995).
Parts of Hitt's novel Off the Road: A Modern-Day Walk Down the Pilgrim’s Route into Spain were reworked by Emilio Estevez and Martin Sheen into the movie The Way.
Hit was interviewed for two documentaries; (2008) and for Tower to the People (2015).
Written by Jack Hitt
Edited by Jack Hitt
Article by Jack Hitt selected for inclusion