Kai Bird

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Kai Bird
File:KAI BIRD author photo by Stephen Frietch.jpg
Kai Bird in 2013
Born 1951 (age 72–73)
Eugene, Oregon, United States
Occupation Biographer, columnist
Alma mater Carleton College
Northwestern University
Spouse Susan Goldmark
Website
www.kaibird.com

Kai Bird (born September 2, 1951)[1] is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning author and columnist, best known for his biographies of political figures.

Biography

Bird was born in 1951 in Eugene, Oregon. His father was a U.S. Foreign Service officer, and Bird spent his childhood in Jerusalem, Beirut, Dhahran, Cairo, and Mumbai. His father named him after Kai-Yu Hsu, a refugee from Communist China he met at the University of Oregon. Kai means "mustard" in Mandarin Chinese, and "Kai-Yu" suggests somebody who adds spice to life.[2]

Bird finished high school in 1969 at Kodaikanal International School in Tamil Nadu, South India. He received his BA from Carleton College in 1973 and a M.S. in journalism from Northwestern University in 1975. Bird now lives in Lima, Peru with his wife, Susan Goldmark, country director of the World Bank, and their son, Joshua.[3]

Literary career

After graduation from Carleton, Bird received a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, which enables students to do a year of independent study outside the United States. He used the fellowship to do a photojournalism project in Yemen. Two years later, Goldmark was also awarded a Watson Fellowship, and the two of them spent 15 months as freelance journalists traveling through Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan. "We filed weekly stories with papers like the Christian Science Monitor and Hong Kong’s Far Eastern Economic Review," Bird says. "We hardly made any money, but we enjoyed what we were doing."[4] Bird was an associate editor of The Nation magazine from 1978–82 and then a Nation columnist.

Published works

Bird's biographical works include The Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy, Brothers in Arms (Touchstone, 1998), The Chairman: John J. McCloy and the Making of the American Establishment (Random House, 1992) and Hiroshima's Shadow: Writings on the Denial of History and the Smithsonian Controversy (1998), which he co-edited with Lawrence Lifschultz.[3]

In April 2010 his Crossing Mandelbaum Gate: Coming of Age Between the Arabs and Israelis, 1956–1978, was released by Scribner. It is a meld of memoir and history, fusing his early life in the Arab world with an account of the American experience in the Middle East.

The Good Spy: The Life and Death of Robert Ames (Crown, 2014) is a biography of CIA officer Robert Ames, whose career focus was the Middle East. According to the book, Ames played a key role in starting the peace process that led to the Oslo accords between Israel and the PLO.[5] Ames perished in the April 18, 1983 truck bombing of the American embassy in Beirut.

Awards

Bird is a recipient of a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship (1973), an Alicia Patterson Journalism Fellowship[6] (1981), a Guggenheim Fellowship (1982), and a John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Grant for Research and Writing (1993–95). In 2001-2002 he was a Fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Bird and co-author Martin J. Sherwin won the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography for American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (Knopf, 2005).[7] He and Sherwin also won the 2005 National Book Critics Circle Award for their biography of Oppenheimer. In 2008, they also won the Duff Cooper Prize.

Crossing Mandelbaum Gate was a finalist for the 2010 National Book Critics Circle Award in the "Autobiography" category.[8]

References

  1. books.google.com
  2. books.google.com
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  4. http://www.slowdog.com/journEx_KaiBird.html
  5. Kai Bird: The Good Spy: The Life and Death of Robert Ames. Crown, New York 2014, ISBN 978-0-307-88975-1, p.2
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External links