Ahead of its April release, Jon Wertheim profiled the New York Times bestselling author of "The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder." David Grann spoke to 60 Minutes about how he researches ...
David Grann: Well, I-- I'm very weird about this. I-- I do always think there is some kind of idyllic form of a story, like, some, like, perfect, pristine, lost city that you're trying to find and get ...
David Grann finds the stories that follow the themes of human nature. Whether it be an unsolved murder case or a shipwreck from 300 years ago — Grann immerses his reader so deeply into a story due to ...
In 1741, the British ship The Wager – part of a squadron sent to chase and plunder Spanish galleons filled with gold – crashed off the coast of Patagonia, stranding its crew on a desolate South ...
This week in the magazine, David Grann writes about a possible case of wrongful execution. Today, Grann answered readers’ questions in a live chat; a transcript of the discussion follows. THE NEW ...
David Grann was already interested in writing a book about the serial murders of members of the Oklahoma-based Osage Indian tribe when he visited the Osage Nation Museum. On one wall was a panoramic ...
After completing the haunting masterpiece, “Killers of the Flower Moon,” author David Grann was unsure just where to turn next. “Killers of the Flower Moon,” previously a largely untold story of the ...
NEW YORK — Thomas Pynchon once wrote that everyone has an Antarctic, a place to seek answers. This was certainly the case with the British explorer Henry Worsley. His Antarctic was, in fact, ...
David Grann (whose Reporter at Large piece “Trial by Fire” is nominated for a National Magazine Award) has just released “The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession.” He’ll ...
Phyllis Grann, former CEO of Penguin Putnam, is heading to Random House Inc. as vice chairman. In her new post – which she assumes Jan. 2 – Grann will have no line responsibilities but will function ...
David Grann is what you might call a writer’s writer. It’s not that the longtime New Yorker staffer pens particularly elaborate sentences. Rather, he relentlessly chases the sorts of dizzying, ...