Jimmy Breslin
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Jimmy Breslin (born October 17, 1930) is an American columnist and author who has written numerous novels and appeared regularly in various newspapers in New York City, where he lives. On November 2, 2004 he retired as a regular columnist from Newsday but stated his intention to continue writing. In his final Newsday column, Breslin incorrectly predicted a Kerry victory in the 2004 election.
Breslin was born in Jamaica, New York. In 1969, he ran unsuccessfully as an independent for New York City Council President allied with writer Norman Mailer running for Mayor, with the agenda of New York City secession as the 51st state.
According to director William Friedkin, Breslin was originally hired to play "Popeye" Doyle in the 1971 film The French Connection, and completed three weeks of rehearsals with co-star Roy Scheider before Friedkin decided to recast the role.
He won the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary.
In 1977, the Son of Sam killer, David Berkowitz, addressed a letter to Breslin at the height of the Son of Sam scare in New York City.
Among his notable columns, perhaps the best known was published the day after John F. Kennedy's funeral, focusing on the man who had dug the President's grave.[1] The column was indicative of Breslin's style, which often highlights how major events or the actions of those considered "newsworthy" affect the "common man."
In The Gift of A Water Buffalo, an article written in December 2003, he describes purchasing a Water Buffalo for an impovershed family through the nonprofit charitable organization Heifer International. He claims that Heifer International is the only charity he has ever endorsed.
In 1990, Breslin received an e-mail characterizing one of his Newsday columns as sexist. He responded in the Newsday newsroom with an ad hominem attack by promptly denouncing the sender of the e-mail, Ji-Yeon Mary Yuh, a female Korean-American reporter who was a colleague of Breslin's at Newsday, as a "yellow, slant-eyed cur." He also called her what the The New York Times would only describe as "an obscene anatomical reference." Breslin also appeared on the Howard Stern show to further air his grievances. Newsday suspended him for two weeks without pay, even though he offered an apology to the young reporter.
Breslin is married to Ronnie Eldridge. His daughter Rosemary died June 14, 2004 from a rare blood disease.
[edit] Works include
- 1962 Sunny Jim,: The life of America's most beloved horseman, James Fitzsimmons ASIN B0007DY5XS
- 1963 Can't Anybody Here Play This Game?
- 1969 World of Jimmy Breslin ISBN 0-345-21651-2
- 1969 Running Against the Machine: A Grass Roots Race for the New York Mayoralty
- 1970 The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight ISBN 0-316-11174-0
- 1973 World without End, Amen ISBN 0-670-79020-6
- 1976 How the Good Guys Finally Won ISBN 0-345-25001-X
- 1978 .44 ISBN 0-670-32432-9
- 1983 Forsaking All Others ISBN 0-449-20250-X
- 1986 Table Money ISBN 0-89919-312-9
- 1988 He Got Hungry and Forgot His Manners ISBN 0-89919-311-0
- 1991 Damon Runyon: A Life ISBN 0-89919-984-4
- 1997 I Want to Thank My Brain for Remembering Me : A Memoir ISBN 0-316-11879-6
- 2002 American Lives: The Stories of the Men and Women Lost on September 11 ISBN 0-940159-77-5
- 2002 I Don't Want to Go to Jail : A Novel ISBN 0-316-12032-4
- 2002 The Short Sweet Dream of Eduardo Gutierrez ISBN 0-609-60827-4
- 2004 The Church That Forgot Christ ISBN 0-7432-6647-1