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Stephen Glass

Stephen Glass
Photo Credit: David Bartolomi

Stephen Glass

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Excerpt:
Text Excerpt 1 from The Fabulist
Mar 09, 2009
The Fabulist will be released on May 13, 2003 in
May 13, 2003
The Fabulist is now available in
May 13, 2003

Authors on the Web

Forbes.com, June 7, 2013
...atrocities on Lehrer’s level haven’t found themselves welcomed back. There was never a Jayson Blair or Stephen Glass comeback, praise be. James Frey managed a second act, but at least he had the grace to reinvent himself as what he’d been all...
Forbes.com, June 7, 2013
...committed journalistic atrocities on Lehrerâs level havenât found themselves welcomed back. There was never a Jayson Blair or Stephen Glass comeback, praise be. James Frey managed a second act, but at least he had the grace to reinvent himself as what...
World News Network, June 6, 2013
...resumed publication as of Spring 2008.[11] David Churbuck founded Forbes' Web site in 1996. The site uncovered Stephen Glass' journalistic fraud in The New Republic in 1998, an article that drew attention to internet journalism. At the peak of media...
Cinema Blend, May 15, 2013
...films were 2007’s politically charged Breach and 2003’s Shattered Glass, a tense drama focused on the Stephen Glass article fabrication, which make a sci-fi romance kind of an unpredictable choice. According to the press release, Ray’s script was...
Onion AV Club, May 6, 2013
...be labeled “nonfiction,” deserves to be respected as a true creative nonfictioneer or if he’s—shudder—a fabulist, like Stephen Glass. When someone like Mike Daisey cobbles together some factoids and guesses about how Apple’s workers in China...
Atlantic Monthly, April 5, 2013
...a National Magazine Award winner and the one-time editor of The Atlantic, The New Republic (he helped birth Stephen Glass) and The National Journal. Kelly was at the center of media power, and he was beloved by many around him It is often tough to...
The Columbia Chronicle, February 25, 2013
...New York Daily News, and he currently serves as a contributor on several MSNBC programs. Currently, the infamous Stephen Glass, who was exposed in 1998 for spending three years fabricating magazine articles for The New Republic, is awaiting approval...
Economic Times, June 8, 2013
...a book about love. (Yes, love.) But I want to start by recalling another disgraced former magazine writer: Stephen Glass. Glass was once a Washington wunderkind, who wrote remarkable articles filled with fabulous scenes and quotes. It turned out, of...
Forbes.com, June 7, 2013
...atrocities on Lehrer’s level haven’t found themselves welcomed back. There was never a Jayson Blair or Stephen Glass comeback, praise be. James Frey managed a second act, but at least he had the grace to reinvent himself as what he’d been all...
Forbes.com, June 7, 2013
...atrocities on Lehrer’s level haven’t found themselves welcomed back. There was never a Jayson Blair or Stephen Glass comeback, praise be. James Frey managed a second act, but at least he had the grace to reinvent himself as what he’d been all...
Forbes.com, June 7, 2013
...committed journalistic atrocities on Lehrerâs level havenât found themselves welcomed back. There was never a Jayson Blair or Stephen Glass comeback, praise be. James Frey managed a second act, but at least he had the grace to reinvent himself as what...
Gothamist, June 6, 2013
...for the Washington Post in 2009. There better be a chapter about how he had never heard of Stephen Glass or Jayson Blair. The Times says the proposal is currently being shopped around to publishers with a full manuscript promised by November 2014,...
World News Network, June 6, 2013
...resumed publication as of Spring 2008.[11] David Churbuck founded Forbes' Web site in 1996. The site uncovered Stephen Glass' journalistic fraud in The New Republic in 1998, an article that drew attention to internet journalism. At the peak of media...
Pitzer College, June 5, 2013
...Just like the Chinese boy who scratched his name on an ancient Egyptian temple wall, people have been leaving graffiti on Egyptian monuments for quite some time now. In the early 6th century BC, some Greek and Carian mercenaries traveling up the Nile...