Jonathan Green (journalist)

Jonathan Green Author and Journalist

Jonathan Green is an English journalist and author of Murder in the High Himalaya.[1]

Life and career

Green was born in Bury St Edmunds, in Suffolk, England. He attended St Joseph's College, Ipswich. He holds a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College.

Green has written for the New York Times, Virginia Quarterly Review, Garden and Gun, Town and Country, the Sunday Times Magazine, Men's Journal, Fast Company, Esquire, GQ, The Financial Times, Men's Health, and The Mail on Sunday, among others.[2] He has reported in war-torn Sudan, Borneo, and the ice fields of Alaska.[2]

Green's first book was Murder in the High Himalaya: Loyalty, Tragedy, and Escape from Tibet (2010)[3] about the Nangpa La shootings.[4] It is based on his article in Men's Journal called "Murder at 19,000 Feet". Murder in the High Himalaya won the Banff Mountain Book Competition in the Mountain and Wilderness Category (2011). It also won the American Society of Journalists and Authors Outstanding Non Fiction Book of the Year (2011). The book is endorsed by the Dalai Lama and actor Richard Gere.[5][6] It has been optioned to be made into a film Murder at 19,000 Feet[7] directed by Jake Scott.[8]

In homage to the book, Canadian death metal band, Gorguts, based their 2013 album Colored Sands on Tibet and the story told in Murder in the High Himalaya. The song "Absconders" was inspired by the flight to freedom of the Tibetan refugees as documented in the book.

Awards

Sources.[9]

Notes

  1. Christine White (September 11, 2010). "Author Jonathan Green talks about 'Murder in the High Himalaya'". MassLive.com. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
  2. 1 2 Author page at PublicAffairs
  3. Jonathan Green. Murder in the High Himalaya, PublicAffairs, 2010. ISBN 978-1-58648-714-0
  4. Pete Redington (September 6, 2012). "Gunshots on the Roof of the World". Valley Advocate. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  5. "Murder at 19,000 Feet" (PDF). Men's Journal. November 2007.
  6. Steven Russell (July 21, 2011). "Murder in the Himalayas: The ex-Suffolk schoolboy living dangerously". EADT. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  7. Murder at 19,000 Feet, at IMDB
  8. "Vigorous options book pair", Vanity Fair, Dec 14, 2009.
  9. Bio at JonathanGreenOnline

External links

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