J.B. MacKinnon

James Bernard MacKinnon, commonly cited as J.B. MacKinnon, is a Canadian independent journalist, contributing editor and book author. Mackinnon is best known for co-authoring with Alisa Smith the bestselling book The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating, encouraging readers to focus on local eating as a way to address current environmental and economic issues.[1] MacKinnon and Smith also collaborated in the creation of the Food Network Canada television series The 100 Mile Challenge based on the book. He has won three National Magazine Awards, and the 2006 Charles Taylor Prize for best work of Literary Non-Fiction.[2] As a contributing editor to Canadian magazines Adbusters, explore, and Vancouver, and independent journalist, MacKinnon’s writings span a wide range of literary genres and topics, including travel, sports, and politics.[3] MacKinnon’s first book, Dead Man in Paradise and recipient of the Charles Taylor Prize, combines family history and unsolved mystery in the retelling of the murder of Mackinnon’s uncle, a Canadian priest, in 1965 in the Dominican Republic.[4] In 2008, Mackinnon co-authored I Live Here with Mia Kirshner, Michael Simons, and Paul Shoebridges, a poignant collection of stories about victims of crisis throughout the globe.[5] MacKinnon currently lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b The 100-Mile Diet
  2. ^ Vancouver International Writers and Readers Festival
  3. ^ Weir 2006
  4. ^ Buium 2005
  5. ^ Random House 2008

References

See also