Mary Roach | |
Birth Date: | 20 March 1959 |
Birth Place: | Etna, New Hampshire |
Mary Roach (born March 20, 1959) is an American author specializing in popular science and humor.[1] She has published seven New York Times bestsellers: (2003), (2005), (2008), Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void (2010), (2013), (2016), and (2021).
Mary Roach was born in Hanover, New Hampshire[2] Her family moved to Etna, a village within the town of Hanover, and Roach attended Hanover High School and received a bachelor's degree in psychology from Wesleyan University in 1981.
After college, Roach moved to San Francisco, California, and spent a few years working as a freelance copy editor. Her writing career began in the public affairs office of the San Francisco Zoological Society, producing press releases on topics such as wart surgery on elephants. On her days off from the SFZS, she wrote freelance articles for San Francisco Chronicle's Sunday magazine, Image.[3]
She has written essays and feature articles for such publications as Vogue, GQ, The New York Times Magazine, Discover Magazine, National Geographic, Outside Magazine, and Wired[4] as well as columns for Salon.com, In Health ("Stitches"), Reader's Digest ("My Planet"), and Sports Illustrated for Women ("The Slightly Wider World of Sports"),[5] and Inc.com.
From 1996 to 2005, Roach was part of "the Grotto", a San Francisco-based project and community of working writers and filmmakers. It was in this community that Roach got the push she needed to break into book writing.[6] While being interviewed by Alex C. Telander of BookBanter, Roach answered the question of how she got started on her first book:
A few of us every year [from the Grotto] would make predictions for other people, where they'll be in a year. So someone made the prediction that, 'Mary will have a book contract.' I forgot about it and when October came around I thought, I have three months to pull together a book proposal and have a book contract. This is what literally lit the fire under my butt.[7]
Although Roach writes primarily about science, she never intended to make it her career. Roach stated in an interview with TheVerge.com, when asked what exactly got her hooked on writing about science, "To be honest, it turned out that science stories were always, consistently, the most interesting stories I was assigned to cover. I didn't plan it like this, and I don't have a formal background in science, or any education in science journalism."[8]
Roach has appeared on numerous television and radio programs including The Daily Show,[9] The Colbert Report,[10] Coast to Coast AM,[11] NPR's "Fresh Air",[12] and C-SPAN2 BookTV "In Depth."[13] Her 2009 TED talk[14] "Ten Things You Didn't Know About Orgasm",[15] made the organization's list of its most popular talks of all time.[16]
Roach reviews books for The New York Times and was the guest editor of the Best American Science and Nature Writing 2011 edition. She also serves as a member of the Mars Institute's Advisory Board, as an ambassador for Mars One[17] and an advisor for Orion magazine.[18] She has been an Osher Fellow [19] at the San Francisco Exploratorium and has served on the Usage Panel of the American Heritage Dictionary.[20]
Roach currently resides in Oakland, California, where she continues to write.[21]
was a New York Times Bestseller, a 2003 Barnes & Noble "Discover Great New Writers" pick, and one of Entertainment Weekly "Best Books of 2003." The book has been translated into at least 17 languages, including Hungarian (Hullamerev) and Lithuanian (Negyvėliai). Stiff was also selected for the Washington State University Common Reading Program in 2008–2009.[22]
, a New York Times Bestseller, was listed as a New York Times Notable Books pick in 2005. , was chosen as the New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice, was among The Boston Globe Top 5 Science Books, and was listed as a bestseller in several other publications.[23] In 2011, , was chosen as the book of the year for the seventh annual "One City One Book: San Francisco Reads" literary event program.[24] Packing for Mars was also sixth on the New York Times Bestseller list.[25] was also a New York Times Bestseller and on the shortlist for the 2014 Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books.[26]
Roach was the recipient of the Harvard Secular Society's Rushdie Award[27] in 2012 for her outstanding lifetime achievement in cultural humanism. The same year, she received a Special Citation in scientific inquiry from Maximum Fun. Her article on earthquake-proof bamboo houses, "The Bamboo Solution",[28] took the American Engineering Societies Engineering Journalism Award in the general interest magazine category in 1996. In 1995, Roach's article "How to Win at Germ Warfare"[29] was a National Magazine Award finalist.[30]