Ethan Brown

Ethan Brown
Occupation Author
Genres Power, Seduction, Strategy

"Ethan Brown" is a investigative journalist and author. He is best known for his books Queens Reigns Supreme and Shake The Devil Off: A True Story of the Murder that Rocked New Orleans, a Washington Post "Critics Pick" and New York Times Book Review "Editor’s Choice."[1] Ethan's work has been praised by David Simon, Chuck Klosterman, George Pelecanos, and Evan Wright.

Bio

Before writing his books, Ethan was a writer for magazines such as New York Magazine, the New York Observer, and the Rolling Stone.[2] He has written several prominent stories about the rise of new designer drugs and the intersection between drugs, gangs and law enforcement. His work includes a cover story on Ecstasy for New York Magazine.[3]

Books

His first book, Queens Reigns Supreme: Fat Cat, 50 Cent, and the Rise of the Hip Hop Hustler traced the connection between infamous drug dealers Lorenzo "Fat Cat" Nichols and Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff and rappers Irv Gotti, Ja Rule and 50 Cent. Based on extensive interviews, police wiretaps and Browns investigation uncovered the connection between “hip hop hustlers” and actual street hustling. The dangerous connections and unflattering details exposed by Brown led journalist Chuck Klosterman to remark "If somebody doesn't get shot because of this book, I will be fucking amazed."[4]

His next book, Snitch: Informants, Cooperators, and the Corruption of Justice, looked at the complicated and often conflicting relationship between law and enforcement and paid and unpaid informants.[5] The book was subsequently banned from all US federal prisons.[6] It was named to The Root's list of "smartest ,strongest writing about race."

His most recent book, Shake The Devil Off, involved Brown moving to New Orleans to tell the story of a murder-suicide committed by Zackery Bowen, an Iraq War-veteran.[7][8] The murder, which happened post-Hurricane Katrina became a national story amidst speculation of cannibalism and Bowen’s dramatic suicide off the roof of the Omni Hotel in the French Quarter.[9] It was critically well received and reviewed by the New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, The Dallas Morning News and the New Orleans Times-Picayune.[10]

References

External links