Nick Reding (journalist)

Nick Reding (born in St. Louis, Missouri) is an American journalist.

He graduated from Northwestern University with a bachelor's degree in creative writing and English literature, and from New York University with a MFA in Creative Writing, where he was a University Fellow. He lives with his wife and son in Saint Louis.[1]

His work has appeared in Harper's Bazaar, Food and Wine, Outside, Fast Company, and Details.

Awards

Works

  • The Last Cowboys at the End of the World, Crown Publishers, 2001, ISBN 978-0-609-60596-7
  • Methland: The Death and Life of an American Small Town, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2009, ISBN 978-1-59691-650-0

Reviews

Journalist Nick Reding stumbled into Gooding, Idaho, in 1999, to report a magazine story about ranching in the sparsely populated flatlands northwest of where Idaho, Nevada and Utah come together. It was there that Reding first encountered crystal methamphetamine, and he didn't just see it in one place. It was everywhere -- on the ranches, in the bars that overmatched police dared not enter and in the ranch bunkhouses where dealers dropped by like door-to-door salesmen.[4]

Small-town residents, the story goes, are honest, hard-working, religiously observant and somehow just more American than the rest of America. In his persuasive new book, "Methland," journalist Nick Reding reveals the fallacies of this myth by showing how, over the past three decades, small-town America has been blighted by methamphetamine, which has taken root in -- and taken hold of -- its soul.[5]

gollark: Apparently Zen 2 is using *two* branch prediction things.
gollark: It's still quite cool.
gollark: And they break down the instructions into smaller instructions, and I think somehow execute several of those at the same time on one core.
gollark: And they somehow have billions of transistors switching billions of times a second using less power than an old inefficient lightbulb.
gollark: They're working on scales barely above individual atoms, and yet somehow reliably and cheaply enough that you can (well, will be able to around today) buy stuff made this way for £200 or so.

References

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