Joseph Nocera

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph Nocera is an award-winning American business journalist and author. He has been a columnist for The New York Times since April 2005. Nocera is also a business commentator for NPR’s Weekend Edition with Scott Simon.

Prior to joining The New York Times, Nocera worked at Fortune from 1995 to 2005, in a variety of positions, finally as editorial director. Nocera was the "Profit Motive" columnist at GQ from 1990 to 1995, and also wrote the same column for Esquire from 1988 to 1990.

In the 1980's, Nocera was an editor at Newsweek; an executive editor of New England Monthly; and a senior editor at Texas Monthly. In the late 1970s he was also an editor at The Washington Monthly.

Nocera earned a B.S. in journalism from Boston University in 1974, and now lives in New York, New York.

Three of his Fortune articles are considered noteworthy:

[edit] Awards

Nocera's 1994 book, A Piece of the Action: How the Middle Class Joined the Money Class, won the the New York Public Library's 1995 Helen Bernstein Award for best non-fiction book of the year.

Nocera also won two Gerald Loeb (1993, 1996) and three Hancock (1983, 1984, 1991) awards. He has been made a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize this year.

[edit] Bibliography

  • (1994) A Piece of The Action How The Middle Class Joined The Money Class. Simon Schuster. 

[edit] External links