Joshua Prager (writer)

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Joshua Harris Prager (born 1971) is an American journalist and author.

Biography

Joshua Harris Prager was born in a Jewish family in Eagle Butte, South Dakota. Prager is the son of Columbia University physician and medical ethics expert Kenneth Prager, and the nephew of commentator Dennis Prager.[1]He attended the Moriah School in Englewood, New Jersey, the Ramaz High School in Manhattan,[2] and Columbia College, where he studied music theory.[3]

In May 1990, Prager was paralyzed in a road accident in Israel when a truck driver rammed into the minibus in which he was riding.[4]

Literary career

Prager has written for publications including Vanity Fair,[5] the New York Times,[6] and the Wall Street Journal, where he was a senior writer for eight years.[7] His first book The Echoing Green: The Untold Story of Bobby Thomson, Ralph Branca and the Shot Heard Round the World, is about the Shot Heard 'Round the World, a famous 1951 baseball playoff game between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants.

His second book, Half Life: Reflections from Jerusalem on a Broken Neck is about the road accident in Israel that left him paralyzed. [8]He describes his rehabilitation and recovery from the accident; how he tracked down his fellow passengers and the wife of the bus driver, who was killed in the accident; and his meeting with the truck driver, who rambled on about his own suffering and expressed no remorse for his actions.[9]

Prager has lectured at venues including TED[7] and Google,[10] and has received fellowships from the Nieman Foundation for Journalism[11] and the Fulbright Program.[12] Prager often writes of historical secrets. He found the reclusive heir of Margaret Wise Brown, author of the classic children's book Goodnight Moon.[13] He confirmed the decades-long rumor that the New York Giants had stolen signs en route to the 1951 pennant.[14] In 2011, Prager revealed that baseball pitcher Ralph Branca (pitcher in the aforementioned baseball game) was born to a Jewish mother.[6] He named the only anonymous winner in the history of the Pulitzer Prizes, the Iranian photographer Jahangir Razmi.[15] Prager revealed the suicides of the parents of Swedish humanitarian Raoul Wallenberg.[16]

References

  1. Ford, Luke. Article on Dennis Prager, LukeFord.net (March 13, 1998).
  2. Cohen, Irwin. "Baseball Is Dull Only To Those With Dull Minds", The Jewish Press, February 7, 2007. "The best book you can get about Thomson’s homer, the 1951 season, the players, sign-stealing and more is Joshua Prager’s The Echoing Green. Prager, who grew up in New Jersey, went to Moriah Day School, Ramaz High School and spent a year in yeshiva after high school before going on to college and a writing career with The Wall Street Journal."
  3. http://joshuaprager.com/wsj"Joshua Prager grew up in New Jersey and studied music theory at Columbia College."
  4. Prager, Joshua."A Movie Stokes My Memories",The Wall Street Journal, November 30, 2007.
  5. http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2013/02/norma-mccorvey-roe-v-wade-abortion
  6. 6.0 6.1 Joshua Prager (August 14, 2011). "For Branca, an Asterisk of a Different Kind". New York Times. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w0gmh_ZRqJA
  8. Half-life
  9. The sound of one finger typing, Haaretz
  10. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSs2So4QPAE
  11. 2 AP staffers among 24 selected as Nieman Fellows
  12. http://www.cies.org/schlr_directories/usdir11/us_dir_geo.htm
  13. Joshua Prager (September 8, 2000). "Runaway Money". Wall Street Journal. p. A1. 
  14. Joshua Prager (January 31, 2001). "Inside Baseball". Wall Street Journal. p. A1. 
  15. Joshua Prager (December 2, 2006). "A Chilling Photograph's Hidden History". Wall Street Journal. p. A1. 
  16. Joshua Prager (February 28, 2009). "The Wallenberg Curse". Wall Street Journal. p. A1. 

External links

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