Ben Greenman
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Ben Greenman (born 1969) is an American writer and magazine editor.
Greenman was born in Chicago, Illinois and raised in Miami, Florida. He attended Miami Palmetto High School and then Yale University where he worked on the Yale Herald. After Yale, he worked as a film critic at New Times newspaper in Miami and then moved to New York City to work as a freelance writer and editor. His journalism has appeared in such magazines as Rolling Stone, Mother Jones, Time Out New York, and other publications. In 2000, he joined the staff of the The New Yorker magazine, where he edits the Goings On About Town Section.
Greenman's first book of fiction, Superbad, was published by McSweeneys Press in 2001. The book is a collection of stories, most humorous, dealing with such issues as creativity, originality, and pop culture while also experimenting with fictional forms. Superworse, published by SoftSkull Press in 2004, reworked some of the material from Superbad but added a more novelistic structure to the book. His short fiction has appeared in such publications as Zoetrope All Story, the Paris Review, and Opium Magazine. His third book, titled A Circle Is A Balloon and Compass Both, will be published in the spring of 2007.
In addition to his books, Greenman has penned a series of musicals that reflect on current-events happenings of the day (one recent example, If I Did It! The Musical, responds to the news that O.J. Simpson planned to publish a book speculating on the murder of his ex-wife Nicole, and others retell the stories of the racehorse Barbaro and the feud between Donald Trump and Rosie O'Donnell). He has also invented the Conceptual Art Registry (in which he generates hundreds of ideas for conceptual art shows and then licenses them to young artsts) and authored a series of epistolary stories that attack the conservative talk-show host Sean Hannity. As a collaborative artist, he has worked with the band One Ring Zero on their author project, with the poet Mary Anfinsen, with the singer/songwriter Boyce Day, and others.
He maintains his own website, www.bengreenman.com, which purports to be a community bank.