Adrian Nicole LeBlanc

Adrian Nicole LeBlanc is an American journalist whose works focus on the marginalized members of society: adolescents living in poverty, prostitutes, women in prison, etc. She is best known for her 2003 non-fiction book Random Family. She was a recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship—popularly known as the "Genius Grant"—in 2006.

Adrian LeBlanc
NationalityAmerican
Alma materSmith College;
Oxford University;
Yale University.
GenreJournalism
Notable awardsHoltzbrinck Fellow;
MacArthur Fellowship

Background and education

LeBlanc grew up in a working-class family in Leominster, Massachusetts. She studied at Smith College, Oxford, and Yale University. She worked for Seventeen Magazine as an editor after earning her master's degree in modern literature at Oxford.

Random Family

LeBlanc's first book, Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx, took more than 10 years to research and write. Random Family is a nonfiction account of the struggles of two women and their family as they deal with love, drug dealers, babies and prison time in the Bronx. LeBlanc and Random Family garnered several awards and nominations. Her research methods earned her a spot among several other journalists and nonfiction writers in Robert Boynton's book, New New Journalism.[1]

Career

Journalism

LeBlanc has contributed to the New York Times Magazine, the Village Voice, the New Yorker and Esquire magazine. She currently lives in Manhattan.

Academic

Adrian Nicole LeBlanc was a Holtzbrinck Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, Germany, for Spring 2009. She is a visiting scholar[2] at the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University 2009–2010. She was part of the Harman Writer-in-Residence Program at Baruch College in Spring 2011.

Other publications

  • Gang Girl: When Manny’s Locked-Up (August, 1994)
  • Landing From the Sky (The New Yorker, April 23, 2000)
  • When the Man of the House is in the Big House (Cover, January, 2003)
  • Sidelines (About the work of Swiss artist Uwe Wittwer, in Geblendet / Dazzled: Kehrer, Heidelberg, 2005)
  • 'The Ground We Lived On': A Father's Last Days[3] (documenting the last months of her father's life, on NPR's All Things Considered, 2006)
  • Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx. Simon and Schuster. 23 October 2012. ISBN 978-1-4391-2489-5.

Awards

  1. Margolis Award (2000
  2. Lettre Ulysses Award (2003)
  3. New York Times Best Books of the Year (2003)
  4. Borders Original Voices Award for Nonfiction
  5. MacArthur Fellow (2006)
gollark: So you probably need checksums now and you use up even more of the packet size.
gollark: And you also need to be able to autodetect properties of the system of DNS servers between you and the authoritative one doing the actual bridging. But that might randomly change (e.g. if you switch network) and start messing up your data.
gollark: But you also want to be able to send data up efficiently, but you're probably using much of the limited space for user data which won't get munged by recursive DNS/proxies/whatever on the session token and whatever, so now you have to deal with *that*.
gollark: Possibly? You apply somewhere.
gollark: Basically, send one query to get a session token of some sort, and then repeatedly send queries involving that to get the remaining data. But DNS doesn't guarantee message ordering, obviously, so you need to have sequence numbers and reassemble somewhere and ask for retransmits and all that.

References

  1. "newnewjournalism.com". Newnewjournalism.com. Retrieved 2013-02-17.
  2. "News » Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University". Journalism.nyu.edu. Archived from the original on 2010-09-10. Retrieved 2013-02-17.
  3. Archived March 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
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