| From
Ground Zero in New York to ground zero in Kabul, to police stations,
refugee camps, snipers’ roosts, subway platforms, and
theater stages, NPR's Peabody-Award-winning Scott Simon has
reported from all 50 states and every continent. He has covered
ten wars, hundreds of campaigns, sieges, famines, hurricanes,
earthquakes, civil wars, and scandals, state funerals and opening
nights. He has interviewed and profiled some of the most interesting
personalities of the times, from Mother Teresa to Ariel Sharon
and Wyclef Jean, to roving street kids in Rio, and refugees
in Kosovo, Ethiopia and Sudan.
Simon has received numerous
honors for his reporting, including the Overseas Press Club,
Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University, George Foster Peabody,
Ohio State, Directors Guild, Major Armstrong, and Emmy awards.
He received a special 1989 George Foster Peabody Award for his
weekly essays, which were cited for their sensitivity and literary
style.
Simon has hosted many
public television specials, including “Voices of Vision,”
“Life on the Internet,” “State of Mind,”
“American Pie,” “Search for Common Ground,”
and specials on privacy in America and democracy in the Middle
East. He narrated the documentary film "Lincoln of Illinois"
for PBS, and was blown up by Martians in the Grammy Award-nominated
50th anniversary remake of The War of the Worlds (co-starring
Jason Robards). He hosted public television's coverage of the
1992 Rio Earth Summit, the BBC series Eyewitness, which
was seen in the United States on the Discovery Channel, and
a BBC special on the White House press corps. Simon was also
co-anchor with Gwen Ifill of PBS's millennium special broadcast
in 2000. He was a frequent guest host of the CBS television
program Nightwatch and CNBC's TalkBack Live, and
an essayist and commentator on NBC's Weekend Today and
NOW with Bill Moyers, and ESPN.
Simon has written
for The New York Times Book Review and Op-Ed pages, the
Wall Street Journal opinion and book page, The Los
Angeles Times, Friends Journal, and Gourmet Magazine
(his Gourmet article on “Conflict Cuisine”
recently won the International Culinary Professionals Award).
The son of comedian Ernie
Simon and actress Patricia Lyons, Simon grew up in Chicago,
New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Montreal, Cleveland, and
Washington, DC. He attended the University of Chicago and McGill
University, and has received numerous honorary degrees.
Simon's book Home
and Away: Memoir of a Fan was published in the spring
of 2000 by Hyperion, a division of Disney. It topped the Los
Angeles Times nonfiction bestseller list, and was cited as one
of the best books of the year in the Washington Post, Boston
Globe, and several other publications. His second book, Jackie
Robinson and the Integration of Baseball, kicked off the
prestigious Wiley Turning Points series in September of 2002,
and was the Barnes and Noble Sports Book of the Year. It was
reissued in 2007, the 60th anniversary of Jackie Robinsons’
entry into the major leagues.
Simon became a novelist
in 2005. Pretty
Birds, his novel about teenage girls during the siege of
Sarajevo, was acclaimed as “the start of a brilliant new
career,” and is now in its’ 13th printing. His next
novel, a political comedy called Windy
City, was published in April 2008.
Simon is a lover of ballet,
and has appeared as Mother Ginger with the Ballet Austin production
of The Nutcracker.
Simon is married
to Caroline Richard. They have a daughter, Elise, and welcomed
their second daughter, Lina, in April 2007. His hobbies include
Mexican cooking, ballet, book collecting, and living and dying
for the Chicago Cubs, White Sox, Bears, Bulls, and now, as a
token of affection for his wife, the French national soccer
team.
•••
“Always
gripping, always tender, and often painfully funny, Pretty
Birds is a marvel of technical finesse, close observation,
and a perfectly pitched heart”
Scott
Turow
“Simon, who has
covered the siege of Sarajevo for NPR, puts the events in a
war-torn land into human perspective with memorable characters
struggling with issues of ethnicity, survival, friendship, and
betrayal.”
ALA |