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Reagan Arthur is Senior Vice President and Publisher of Little, Brown. Writers she has worked with include Kate Atkinson, Josh Bazell, Kate Braestrup, Joshua Ferris, Tina Fey, Elin Hilderbrand, Kathleen Kent, Elizabeth Kostova, Denise Mina, George Pelecanos, Dan Simmons, and Ian Rankin.
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Tracy Behar is Vice President, Executive Editor of LIttle, Brown. She acquires within the categories of health, psychology/self-help, parenting, reference, and science. She joined Little, Brown in 2005 after working as Editorial Director at Atria Books, Associate Publisher at Broadway Books, and Executive Managing Editor at HarperCollins. Among the authors she has worked with are Andrew Weil, Joel Fuhrman, Mark Hyman, William Sears, Bob Greene, Sue Johnson, John Ratey, Arianna Huffington, Roy Peter Clark, Donald and Lillian Stokes, Harville Hendrix, and The Dalai Lama.
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Judy Clain is Vice President, Editor in Chief at Little, Brown and Company publishers, where she has worked since 1998. She focuses on story-driven, up-market literary fiction, narrative non-fiction, memoirs, and strong suspense novels. Some of the novels she has edited include the New York Times bestseller Room by Emma Donoghue, The Girls by Lori Lansens, The Fig Eater by Jody Shields, To Be Sung Underwater by Tom McNeal, Ayad Akhtar’s debut, American Dervish, and the thrillers Guilt by Association and Guilt by Degrees by Marcia Clark. Non-fiction titles she has edited include the New York Times bestsellers The Horse Boy by Rupert Isaacson, Lunch in Paris by Elizabeth Bard, and Julie Powell’s Julie and Julia, as well as Cheerful Money by Tad Friend and The Fear by Peter Godwin. A few of Judy’s recent projects are Regina O’Melveny’s The Book of Madness and Cures, Anne Korkeakivi’s An Unexpected Guest, Liza Klaussmann’s Tigers in Red Weather, a second novel by Maria Semple called Where’d You Go, Bernadette, and Emma Donoghue’s new story collection, Astray. Her forthcoming titles include the next novel in Marcia Clark’s Rachel Knight series, a sequel to Elizabeth Bard’s Lunch in Paris, and several exciting debuts, including Hannah Kent’s Burial Rites and Peggy Riley’s Amity & Sorrow.
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Joshua Kendall is an Executive Editor and the Editorial director of Mulholland Books. He previously worked at Viking/Penguin, where he edited Tana French, the Edgar Award-winning and New York Times-bestselling author of Faithful Place and Broken Harbor. He is also the editor of bestselling Stewart O'Nan, whose Emily, Alone was a Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, and NPR Best Novel of the Year. In 2011, he published Donovan Hohn's debut Moby-Duck, a national bestseller that went on to be named a Best Book of the Year at over six publications as well as three NPR programs. Josh has also edited bestselling mystery writers such as Jasper Fforde, Martha Grimes, and Tom Knox, as well as literary novelists Ron Carlson, Ron Rash, and Keith Gessen.
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Asya Muchnick is an Executive Editor and has been at Little, Brown since 2001. She acquires literary and upmarket crime fiction, and narrative nonfiction, including history, biography, cultural history, and popular science. Among the authors she has worked with are Jo Ann Beard, Mark Childress, Michael Connelly, Zoë Ferraris, Janet Fitch, Pete Hamill, Alice Hoffman, Richard Lange, James E. McWilliams, Stephenie Meyer, Robert Mrazek, Carolyn Parkhurst, Sebastian Rotella, Alice Sebold, Åsne Seierstad, David Sedaris, Anita Shreve, and Peter Trachtenberg.
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John Parsley is an Executive Editor. Before joining Little, Brown and Company in 2007, he worked at Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press after starting his career at Times Books/Henry Holt, and he has edited New York Times bestsellers including One on One, by John Feinstein; Area 51, by Annie Jacobsen; The Disappearing Spoon and The Violinist’s Thumb, by Sam Kean; Inside Seal Team Six, by Don Mann; Ghost in the Wires, by Kevin Mitnick; Cold, by Bill Streever; and The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman. He acquires a broad range of serious and narrative nonfiction, including popular science, natural history, and technology, music and popular culture, sports, history, current events, politics, business, and humor. |
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Michael L. Sand is an Executive Editor with more than twenty years of experience in illustrated books. He is currently developing titles in the areas of American history, popular culture, and food and wine. Notable recent publications includeLIFE: The American Journey of Barack Obama, The Library of Congress Illustrated Timeline of the Civil War, the James Beard Award-winning The Flavor Bible, and Eleven Madison Park: The Cookbook. In addition, he oversees development of books, calendars, and interactive apps in the Ansel Adams publishing program, which has had its home at Little, Brown for nearly forty years. |
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Geoff Shandler joined Little, Brown in September, 2000. Since then, he has worked with numerous bestselling and award-winning authors, including Malcolm Gladwell, Jonathan Safran Foer, John le Carre, James Bradley, Evan Thomas, Dana Priest, Jim Miller, Robert Dallek, Mary Gabriel, Luis Alberto Urrea, Sir Harold Evans and Jake Tapper.
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Pat Strachan has been a Senior Editor at Little, Brown since 2002. She began her career at Farrar, Straus and Giroux, where she worked as an editor for seventeen years—rising to vice president and associate publisher—and received the PEN/Roger Klein Award for Editing. After four years as a fiction editor at The New Yorker, she returned to book publishing. Among the writers whose books she has edited are Lydia Davis, Ian Frazier, Thom Gunn, Seamus Heaney, Larry Heinemann, Jamaica Kincaid, Galway Kinnell, John McPhee, Czeslaw Milosz, Grace Paley, Padgett Powell, Marilynne Robinson, Jim Shepard, and Derek Walcott. Her Little, Brown books include fiction by Uwem Akpan, Kathryn Davis, Michelle de Kretser, Clyde Edgerton, Susan Froderberg, Zachary Lazar, Rick Moody, Edna O’Brien, Peter Orner, Tom Wolfe, and Daniel Woodrell; and nonfiction by Frederick Brown, Bill Clegg, Gail Collins, Dwight Garner, Josh Garrett-Davis, Brad Gooch, Rosemary Mahoney, and Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts. In 2010, she received the annual Editor’s Award from Poets & Writers, “recognizing a book editor who has made an outstanding contribution to the publication of poetry or literary prose over a sustained period of time.”
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Laura Tisdel began her career at Viking Penguin books—-first in publicity and then in editorial—-before becoming an Editor at Reagan Arthur Books. She is eager to acquire narrative nonfiction and literary fiction with a commercial edge, and is especially drawn to powerful, funny narrative voices, plot twists, genre-bending novels, and novels with a strong sense of place. She’s proud to have edited Lev Grossman, Garrison Keillor, Morgan Callan Rogers, and the forthcoming novels The Unknowns by Gabriel Roth and The Encyclopedia of Early Earth by Isabel Greenberg.
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