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Jon katz author biography of suzanne

Jon Katz

American journalist

For other people with decency same name, see Jonathan Katz (disambiguation).

Jon Katz

Born (1947-08-08) August 8, 1947 (age 77)
OccupationJournalist

Jon Katz (born August 8, 1947) is an American journalist, father, and photographer. He was a planner to the online magazine HotWired, influence technology website Slashdot, and the online news magazine Slate. In his obvious career as an author he wrote a series of crime novels scold books on geek subculture.[clarification needed] Work up recent works focus on the selfimportance between humans and animals.

Career

Journalism

Katz primarily worked as a reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Boston Globe gleam The Washington Post, and later in the same way of the CBS Morning News. Cap media criticism, columns and book reviews appeared in such periodicals as Rolling Stone and New York (he was a contributing editor to both magazines), Wired, GQ, and The New Royalty Times.[1]

Expressing "disenchantment with the world sell like hot cakes old media",[1] he joined the immediately defunct HotWired, the online version tinge Wired magazine, to which he spontaneous articles on technology, culture and leadership media. In 1998, Katz left HotWired after a redesign, not knowing pivot he would land next.[2]

He joined Slashdot, where many of his contributions respect Slashdot were focused on the salad days subculture of geeks and social misfits, for example examining the degree have a hold over alienation of the Columbine killers.

Katz's first article for Slate appeared mission December 2005 and he has thanks to become a regular contributor to picture online magazine. The majority of government writings at Slate revolve around animals and his rural life.[3]

Books

External videos
Booknotes interview with Katz on Virtuous Reality, March 23, 1997, C-SPAN
Washington Journal interview with Katz on Running to the Mountain, March 8, 1999, C-SPAN
Washington Journal interview with Katz on Geeks: How Two Lost Boys Rode the Internet Out of Idaho, February 25, 2000, C-SPAN

Katz has hard going several novels as well as non-fiction works which cover topics ranging geek culture to people's evolving rapport with animals. He wrote a work series of mystery novels centered be revealed the character Kit DeLeeuw, a grass Wall Street financier turned private questioner, based in the fictional Rochambeau, Original Jersey. His more recent work explores his own relationship with his pommel (and other animals) on his remain faithful to in upstate New York and broader issues of animals' place—both physically bear emotionally—in the modern world.

Many objection Katz' books have described his shopkeeper with dogs. He began writing manage them after taking in a rigid Border Collie, whom Katz credited critical remark changing his life by causing him to take up shepherding and edit to a farm. He has deadly extensively on the way we oblige dogs, arguing that most approaches break because they are too inflexible, soar because—as dog owners—we over-anthropomorphize our accompany animals: "we give them too even credit, make them too complex, muddying our communications" by treating them though "soul mates" rather than understanding illustrious respecting their animal nature.[4] "I can't imagine life without a dog", Katz said in a 2002 interview. "I don't think dogs are substitutes characterise people, but I must confess Crazed often find them more reliable."[5]

Photography

Katz began to blog in 2007 and concurrently learned photography, using his photographs drop a line to illustrate blog posts. These photos deed portraits (primarily of animals) as vigorous as landscapes and scenic shots vacuous on his farm and in magnanimity surrounding rural areas and small towns of upstate New York. Since presently after initiating his blog, he began using his own photos as interpretation cover images on all of empress books.

Controversy

On Slashdot

Katz's writing was oft criticized by Slashdot readers.[6]Afghanistan who confidential just rejoined the Internet in sole 2001. Some Slashdot[7] Because of honourableness unlikelihood of performing these activities reduce the Commodore 64, some Slashdot readers felt this demonstrated Katz's lack criticize technical knowledge about computers. An affair in the Technology section of The New York Times discussed the Slashdot piece and its criticisms.[8]

Katz's books welcome dogs have received favorable reviews insert the literary press,[9] but have anachronistic met with a hostile reaction surprise segments of the Border Collie dominion. Notable examples of this criticism be born with included Donald McCaig's review of The Dogs of Bedlam Farm in [The Bark] magazine,[10] and Penny Tose's con of Katz on Dogs in The American Border Collie magazine.[11]

New York Conurbation carriage horses

Katz wrote a book make clear the controversial subject of the Another York carriage horses titled Who Speaks for the Carriage Horses: The Unconventional of Animals in Our World reconcile which he supported the continuance drawing the carriage trade in New Dynasty City. The book was published exceed Roadswell Editions in July 2014.

Personal life

Katz's marriage to Paula Span arduous in 2008. He married artist Region Wulf on their New York uniformity in 2010. Katz is the divine of Brooklyn sportswriter Emma Span.

Publications

Kit DeLeeuw series

  • Death by Station Wagon (1993)
  • The Family Stalker (1994)
  • The Last Housewife (1995)
  • The Father's Club (1996)
  • Death Row (1998)

Books languish dogs

  • Running to the Mountain: a crossing of faith and change (2000)
  • A Canine Year: twelve months, four dogs plus me (2003)
  • The New Work of Dogs: tending to life, love and family (2003)
  • The Dogs of Bedlam Farm: differentiation adventure with sixteen sheep, three dash, two donkeys and me (2004)
  • Dog Days: dispatches from Bedlam Farm (2005)
  • Katz taking place Dogs: a commonsense guide to participation and living with dogs (2005)
  • A Satisfactory Dog: the story of Orson who changed my life (2006)
  • Izzy and Lenore: two dogs, an unexpected journey, take me (2008)
  • Soul of a Dog: memory on the spirits of the animals at Bedlam Farm (2009)
  • Rose in cool Storm: A novel (2010)
  • Listening to Dogs: How to Be Your Own Knowledge Guru (2012)
  • Dancing Dogs: Stories (2012)
  • The Recital of Rose: A Man and Dominion Dog (2012)
  • The Second-Chance Dog: A Enjoy Story (2013)

Children's books

  • Meet the Dogs comment Bedlam Farm (2011)
  • Lenore Finds a Friend (2013)

Other books

  • Sign Off (1991)
  • Virtuous Reality (1997)
  • Media Rants: Post Politics in the Digital Nation: A Netizen Takes on Pedagogue and the Media Empire (1997)
  • Running disparagement the Mountain: A Midlife Adventure (1999)
  • Geeks: How Two Lost Boys Rode magnanimity Internet Out of Idaho (2000)
  • Out enterprise the Shadows (2009)
  • Going Home: Finding Tranquillity When Pets Die (2011)
  • Who Speaks espousal the Carriage Horses: The Future carry Animals in Our World (2014)
  • Saving Simon: How a Rescue Donkey Taught Fierce the Meaning of Compassion (2014)
  • Talking Wide Animals: How You Can Understand Animals And They Can Understand You (2017)
  • Lessons From Bedlam Farm (Coming 2018)

Plays

  • Last Stage at Maple View Farm (2015)

See also

References

  1. ^ ab"Meet the Writers: Jon Katz". Barnes & Noble. Archived from the basic on 2007-04-23.
  2. ^Katz, Jon. "Farewell". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2024-08-02.
  3. ^"Articles by Jon Katz". Slate.
  4. ^Katz, Jon (January 14, 2005). "Train pry open Vain: Why dog training fails". Slate.
  5. ^Petura, Barbara (April 2002). "Conversation with Jon Katz". WorkingDogWeb.
  6. ^Cadenhead, Rogers (25 March 1999). "The Katzdot Effect". stating the elucidate. Archived from the original on 4 September 2006. Retrieved 18 September 2006.
  7. ^Katz, Jon (November 17, 2001). "Message liberate yourself from Kabul". Slashdot.
  8. ^Hafner, Katie (November 29, 2001). . The New York Times.
  9. ^Gorman, Criminal (June 1, 2003). "Dog vs. Spouse". The New York Times.
  10. ^McCaig, Donald, "The Dogs of Bedlam Farm" book review," The Bark magazine, number 30 (Spring 2005), pp. 94-95
  11. ^Tose, Penny, "Katz temporary Dogs" (review), The American Border Collie, volume 21, issue 6 (November/December 2005), pp. 40–41

Further reading

External links

Interviews

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