Dan Barry (reporter)

Dan Barry is a longtime reporter and columnist for The New York Times. He is the author of five books, including This Land: America, Lost and Found, a collection of his national columns for The Times that was published in 2018.

Dan Barry
Born1958 (age 6162)
Queens, New York, United States
EducationSt. Bonaventure University, B.A.
New York University M.A. in journalism
Occupationjournalist, columnist, author
Notable work
"This Land" New York Times column
"About New York" New York Times column
Bottom of the 33rd
Pull Me Up: A Memoir
City Lights: Stories About New York
The Boys in the Bunkhouse
This Land: America, Lost and Found
Spouse(s)Mary Trinity
ChildrenNora, Grace

Biography

Barry, whose father was from Brooklyn and whose mother was from County Galway, Ireland, was born in Queens, N.Y., and raised in Deer Park, N.Y. He graduated from St. Anthony's High School (now in Huntington, N.Y.) in 1976, when it was an all-boys high school in Smithtown, N.Y. His experiences at St. Anthony's figure in his memoir, Pull Me Up. He graduated from St. Bonaventure University in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in mass communications and received a master's degree in journalism from New York University.

In 1983, after years working as a delicatessen clerk and ditch digger, Barry joined The Journal Inquirer in Manchester, Conn., as a reporter, and moved to the Providence Journal-Bulletin in 1987. In 1992, he won a shared Polk Award for investigating the causes of a state banking crisis. In 1994, he was part of a Journal-Bulletin investigative team that won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting after exposing corruption in the Rhode Island court system.

Barry joined The New York Times in 1995. He served as Long Island bureau chief, police bureau chief, City Hall bureau chief, and general assignment reporter for the Metropolitan desk before resurrecting the "About New York column" in 2003. Then, in 2007, he began the "This Land" column, which took him to all 50 states over the course of a decade. He now specializes in long-form narratives.

His writing also appears in several non-fiction anthologies.

Personal life

Barry lives in Maplewood, NJ, with his wife, Mary Trinity, and two daughters, Nora and Grace.

Awards

  • 1994 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for exposing corruption in the Rhode Island court system
  • Pulitzer finalist in 2006, for his coverage of post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans and life in New York City
  • Pulitzer finalist in 2010, for his coverage of how the Great Recession changed lives and relationships in America
  • 1992 shared Polk Award for investigating the causes of a state banking crisis
  • 2003 American Society of Newspaper Editors Award for deadline reporting, for his coverage of the first anniversary of Sept. 11
  • the 2005 Mike Berger Award, which honors in-depth human interest reporting
  • the 2010 Sigma Delta Chi Award for column writing from the Society for Professional Journalists
  • 2015 Best American Newspaper Narrative award
  • In May 2016, Barry was given an honorary doctorate by his alma mater, St. Bonaventure University, after which he delivered the commencement address for the graduating class of 2016.
  • In 2018, Barry was named recipient of the Story in the Public Square, awarded by the Pell Center for International Relations and Public Policy

Bibliography

· Pull Me Up (2004) — memoir of Barry's Long Island Irish Catholic upbringing and battle with cancer

· City Lights: Stories About New York (2007) — collection of Barry's "About New York" columns

· Bottom of the 33rd: Hope, Redemption, and Baseball’s Longest Game (HarperCollins, 2011; paperback March 2012) — about the longest game in professional baseball history

· The Boys in the Bunkhouse: Servitude and Salvation in the Heartland (HarperCollins, 2016) – about the exploitation of a group of Texas men with intellectual disability who worked for decades in a turkey-processing plant in eastern Iowa

· This Land: America, Lost and Found (Black Dog & Leventhal, 2018) – a collection of Barry's national "This Land" columns.

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References

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