Shelley Emling Explained

Shelley Emling (born 1965) is an American journalist and author of several books. She has worked as a foreign correspondent and also has had editorial positions.

Born in Missouri, she grew up in Dallas, Texas. She went to the University of Texas and started her journalism career at United Press International (UPI).

Career

Emling started her journalism career working an early shift for UPI. She also worked for smaller newspapers, hoping to move up.

She began to work as a foreign correspondent for Cox Newspapers, covering Latin America for three years. She moved to London, from where she covered UK and European news for several years.

Her work has also appeared in The New York Times, Fortune, USA Today, and the International Herald Tribune.

In 2009 Emling and her family returned to the United States, moving from London to Montclair, New Jersey. In 2010 she became editor for AOL’s Patch.

She served as the senior editor of Huff/Post50, The Huffington Post site for those 50 and older.

Emling is the Executive Editor, Specialized Content, at the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP). She also is editor-in-chief of "The Girlfriend" and "The Ethel" newsletters, both published by AARP. She oversees editorial on AARP's brand Instagram account as well as The Girlfriend Book Club.

Marriage and family

Emling met her husband, Scott Norvell, in Texas while working at "The Corpus Christi Caller-Times." They married in Antigua, Guatemala in 1991 and honeymooned in Colombia. They had three children together.

For a period they were living in London, where she was a foreign correspondent for Cox Newspapers.

Emling lives with her family in Montclair, New Jersey. She has lived in Missouri, Texas, New Orleans, Miami, Guatemala, Atlanta, London, and New York.

Books

Emling has written and published several books, mostly biographies of remarkable women.

The New York Times noted that Emling took a journalistic approach but too often speculated about events that might have happened. The reviewer noted that her ample footnotes put the subject's work "into the scientific and sociological context".[2]

Nature said that Emling's "diligent" work was "more thorough and complete" than Tracy Chevalier's novel about Anning's life, Remarkable Creatures (2009), published nearly at the same time. The reviewer noted, however, that the freedom of the fictional account was more engaging for a reader.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Kirbyson. Ron. Female fossil hunter led to creation of paleontology. February 3, 2011. Winnipeg Free Press. January 30, 2010.
  2. News: Bouton. Katherine. Tale of an Unsung Fossil Finder, in Fact and Fiction. February 3, 2011. The New York Times. February 1, 2010.
  3. Rohn. Jennifer. Forgotten treasure seeker. Nature. October 29, 2009. 461. 7268. 1211–1213. 10.1038/4611211a. 2009Natur.461.1211R. free.
  4. http://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/marie