John Rosengren

John Rosengren (born July 24, 1964 in Minneapolis, Minnesota [1]) is an American writer and author.

His feature articles, profiles and essays have appeared in more than 100 publications, including the Atlantic, New Yorker, Reader's Digest, Runner's World, Sports Illustrated, Tennis, Washington Post magazine, and the Utne Reader. His nine books include The Fight of Their Lives: How Juan Marichal and John Roseboro Turned Baseball's Ugliest Brawl into a Story of Forgiveness and Redemption; Hank Greenberg: The Hero of Heroes, the definitive biography of the most important American Jew of the 20th century; Blades of Glory: A Story of a Young Team Bred to Win, which chronicles a season spent with a successful Minnesota high school hockey team as seen through the eyes of some of the mother's; and Hammerin' Hank, George Almighty and the Say Hey Kid: The Year that Changed Baseball Forever, an account of the 1973 baseball season. He also authored Esera Tuaolo's autobiography Alone in the Trenches: My Life as a Gay Man in the NFL. He has published two works of fiction, the short story collection Life Is Just a Party and the novel A Clean Heart.

Rosengren has won numerous awards for his books and magazine articles. His 10,000-word exposé in the Atlantic "How Casinos Enable Gambling Addicts" won the 2017 Donald Robinson Award for Investigative Journalism and was nominated for a National Magazine Award and a Pulitzer Prize.

Rosengren holds a master's degree in creative writing from Boston University and a bachelor's degree from the University of Saint John's. He teaches occasionally at the University of Minnesota's journalism school. He is or has been a member of the American Society of Journalists and Authors, Biographers International Organization, the Hemingway Society and the Society for American Baseball Research.

Notes

  1. Halsey Hall SABR profile Accessed July 4, 2009
gollark: And I can clearly tell in some domains when someone is better at something than me, even if I don't know exactly how.
gollark: The halting problem is that no Turing machine can tell if arbitrary Turing machines will halt though? No complexity hierarchy involved except theoretical oracle things.
gollark: Regardless of whether you think they are impossible or not, IQ tests and similar things are, as far as I know, correlated with stuff like educational attainment and income.
gollark: I can barely visualise things but not in detail. I also have really good memory for random facts but not life events, and excellent short term verbal memory but awful picture/number memory. Which is odd since those are meant to be correlated.
gollark: That isn't the halting problem and I disagree.
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