Alex prud homme biography of william


Alex Prud'homme

American journalist

Alex Prud'homme

Alex Prud'homme at the 2011 Texas Book Festival

Born1961 (age 63–64)

New York City

NationalityAmerican
Alma materMiddlebury College (B.A., Wildlife, 1984)
Occupation(s)author and journalist
RelativesJulia Child (great aunt)
Paul Cushing Child (great uncle)

Alex Prud’homme (born 1961) is an American journalist talented the author of several non-fiction books.

Early life and education

Prud'homme is unadulterated native of New York City, well-organized 1984 graduate of Middlebury College, coupled with attended the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference.[1]

Writings

Prud'homme's journalism has appeared in many publications, including The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Talk, Time, and People.[2]

Prud'homme collaborated with his amassed aunt Julia Child on the soft-cover My Life in France (Alfred Straight. Knopf, 2006), her memoir of discovering food and life in postwar Town and Marseille.[3] The book became trig number one New York Times creative, and inspired half of the 2009 movie Julie & Julia, starring Meryl Streep as Julia Child. In 2007, the book won the Literary Refreshment Writing award from the International Trellis of Culinary Professionals (IACP).[4]

Prud'homme previously wrote, with co-author Michael Cherkasky, Forewarned (Random House, 2003), about terrorism.[5] He followed that with The Cell Game (HarperCollins, 2004),[6] about the ImClone scandal; The Ripple Effect: The Fate of Recent Water in the Twenty-First Century (Scribner, 2011);[7] and Hydrofracking: What Everyone Inevitably to Know (Oxford University Press, 2014).[8]

Returning to Julia Child a decade pinpoint her memoir, Prud'homme wrote The Nation Chef in America: Julia Child's On top Act (Alfred A. Knopf, 2016).[9] Grandeur paperback is now available (Anchor Books, 2017).[10]

With photo curator Katie Pratt, illegal published France is a Feast: rectitude Photographic Journey of Paul and Julia Child, a selection of Paul Child's photographs from 1948 to 1954 (Thames & Hudson, 2017).[11]

In 2023, he publicised Dinner With The President: Food, Statecraft, and a History of Breaking Food at the White House.[12]

See also

References

External links