List of Jewish American authors
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of famous Jewish American authors. See separate lists for playwrights and poets. For other famous Jewish Americans, see List of Jewish Americans.
- Kathy Acker, writer
- Forrest J. Ackerman, science fiction author & fan
- Nelson Algren, novelist (son of convert)
- Mary Antin, novelist
- Bettina Aptheker (1944 - ) lesbian activist, author, and educator[1]
- Hannah Arendt, writer
- Sholem Asch, Yiddish writer
- Isaac Asimov, science fiction author
- Paul Auster, author
- Peter S. Beagle, novelist
- Saul Bellow, writer, Nobel Prize (1976)
- Aimee Bender - novelist and short story writer, known for her often fantastic and surreal plots and characters[1]
- Robert Bloch, science fiction author
- Lawrence Block, crime novelist
- Rob Bloom, comedy writer
- Judy Blume, children's author
- Maxwell Bodenheim, poet and novelist
- Jane Bowles, writer & playwright
- David Brin, science fiction author
- Harold Brodkey, short story writer
- Geraldine Brooks, author
- Max Brooks, comedic author
- Abraham Cahan, author
- Hortense Calisher, novelist
- Michael Chabon, novelist
- Harlan Coben, mystery writer
- Joshua Cohen, novelist
- Bernard Cooper (1951 - ) novelist, short story writer[2]
- Norman Cousins, prominent political journalist, author, professor, and world peace advocate.
- Larry David, writer, actor, producer
- Peter David, author, columnist and comic book writer
- Anita Diamant, writer
- E. L. Doctorow, writer
- Bob Dylan (1941 - ), singer-songwriter, memoirist.
- Judah David Eisenstein, encyclopedist, Hebrew author
- Harlan Ellison, 'speculative fiction' writer
- Howard Fast, novelist
- Raymond Federman, postmodernist writer
- Harvey Fierstein, playwright
- Jonathan Safran Foer, writer
- Paula Fox, novelist
- Betty Friedan, writer
- Kinky Friedman, crime writer & singer/songwriter
- Alan Furst, spy novel writer
- Allen Ginsberg, poet
- Jeffrey Goldberg (1965 - ) journalist, staff writer for The New Yorker and author of the book Prisoners[3]
- Myla Goldberg, author
- Natalie Goldberg, author & teacher
- Tod Goldberg (1971 - ) author, journalist[4]
- Shari Goldhagen, novelist
- William Goldman, novelist & screenwriter
- Allegra Goodman, novelist
- Paul Goodman, author
- Noah Gordon, author
- Paul Gottfried, author
- Dan Greenburg, author
- Joe Haldeman, science fiction author
- Daniel Handler, writer
- Sam Harris, author
- Michael H. Hart, author
- Ben Hecht, journalist, playwright, screenwriter
- Joseph Heller, novelist
- Richard Herrnstein, author, psychologist
- Mark Helprin, novelist
- J. Richard Jacobs, author, SF novelist
- Rona Jaffe, novelist
- Erica Jong, author
- Mollie Katzen (1950 - ) chef, cookbook author and artist[5]
- Bel Kaufman, author
- Faye Kellerman, crime novelist; married to Jonathan Kellerman
- Jonathan Kellerman, crime novelist married to Faye Kellerman
- Cyril M. Kornbluth, science fiction writer
- Jerzy Kosinski, writer
- Jonathan Kozol, writer & educator
- Edward E. Kramer, writer & editor
- Judith Krantz, romance writer
- James Howard Kunstler, novelist and New Urbanist author
- Tony Kushner, playwright
- Fran Lebowitz (1950 - ) author, known for her sardonic social commentary on American life through her New York sensibilities[6]
- Wendy Lesser, arts critic, novelist, editor (atheist)
- Julius Lester, writer (convert)
- Jonathan Lethem, novelist
- Oscar Levant, author, composer, pianist
- Ira Levin, author
- Michael Levin, author
- Paul Levinson, science fiction author, non-fiction author, op-ed writer, songwriter
- Laura Lippman, crime novelist
- Phillip Lopate, author
- Mina Loy, poet
- Norman Mailer, writer
- Bernard Malamud, writer
- David Mamet, playwright
- Seth Margolis, novelist (Jewish father)
- John Markoff, writer and journalist
- Kati Marton, writer and journalist
- James McBride, author (Jewish mother)
- Arthur Miller, playwright
- Walter Mosley, murder-mystery novelist (Jewish mother)
- Clifford Odets, playwright
- Tillie Olson, author
- Cynthia Ozick, novelist
- Abraham Pais, historian of science
- Grace Paley, short story writer & poet
- Sara Paretsky, mystery writer
- Dorothy Parker, writer, poet & wit (Jewish father)
- S. J. Perelman, humorist
- Marge Piercy, novelist, poet
- Rachel Pollack, science-fiction author
- Virginia Postrel , author & columnist (converted)
- Chaim Potok, novelist
- Ayn Rand, writer (atheist)
- H.A. & Margret Rey, children's writers
- Steven V. Roberts, journalist, writer, and commentator
- Alexandra Robbins, author
- Harold Robbins, author
- Henry Roth, writer
- Philip Roth, novelist
- Murray Rothbard, economist & social critic
- Louis Sachar, children's writer
- J. D. Salinger, author (Jewish father)
- Budd Schulberg, novelist & screenwriter
- Maurice Sendak, children's author
- Sidney Sheldon, novelist & screenwriter
- Irwin Shaw, novelist
- Gary Shteyngart (1972 - ) Russian-born writer[7]
- Robert Silverberg, science fiction author
- Jack M. Silverstein, columnist and commentator
- Shel Silverstein, children's writer, poet & musician
- Neil Simon, playwright
- Isaac Bashevis Singer, Yiddish writer, Nobel Prize (1978)
- Susan Sontag, essayist & novelist
- Danielle Steele, romance novelist (Jewish father)
- Gertrude Stein, writer, poet & playwright
- Joel Stein, columnist
- Gloria Steinem, journalist, editor, writer
- Jacqueline Susann, novelist
- Studs Terkel, author & oral historian
- Alice B. Toklas, literary figure
- Scott Turow, mystery writer
- Harry Turtledove, science fiction writer
- Leon Uris, novelist
- Chris Van Allsburg, children's writer (converted)
- Judith Viorst (1932 - ) author, known for her children's literature[8]
- Ayelet Waldman, mystery writer, novelist
- Irving Wallace, novelist
- Wendy Wasserstein (1950 - 2006) playwright and an Andrew Dickson White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University, also the recipient of the Tony Award for Best Play and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama[9]
- Nathanael West, writer
- Elie Wiesel, writer & Holocaust survivor, Nobel Peace Prize (1986) (naturalized citizen)
- Naomi Wolf , feminist, author & social critic
- Herman Wouk, novelist, writer
- Elizabeth Wurtzel, author
- Anzia Yezierska, author
- Boris Zubry, author (fiction and political satire), inventor, educator
- Rochelle Majer Krich, author, Anthony Award-winning author of "Where's Mommy Now?"
[edit] Literary critics
[edit] References
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ a b "other Jewish authors who may be of interest... Bettina Aptheker... Aimee Bender"
- ^ Cooper - [1] "Plenty of Jewish authors will be in the mix, including... Bernard Cooper"
- ^ Jeffrey Goldberg - [2] "Goldberg recently won the Anti-Defamation League's Daniel Pearl Award and goes so far as to suggest that being Jewish has benefited him in his dealings with terrorists. "I've always found it to my advantage. I use my Jewishness as a tool.""
- ^ Todd Goldberg - [3] "other Jewish authors who may be of interest... Tod Goldberg"
- ^ Katzen - [4] "No, my family was not vegetarian growing up, but I came from a Jewish family that was, although not strictly Kosher, had a lot of awareness when it came to eating meat." [5] "The keynote speakers will be two popular local Jewish cookbook writers, Mollie Katzen and Joyce Goldstein."
- ^ Lebowitz - [6] "Jewish figures such as... author Fran Lebowitz"
- ^ Shteyngart - [7] "Russian Jewish Author Gary Shteyngart"
- ^ Viorst - [8] "Two Jewish children's authors have events of note going on this week. At Pepperdine's Smother's Theatre, see the staged musical adaptation of Judith Viorst's..."
- ^ Wasserstein - [9] "“My father loved me dearly, but I’m not a Jewish American Princess,” playwright Wendy Wasserstein said. “I’m a Jewish mother, but I’m not Molly Goldberg.”"