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Beau Friedlander

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Name
  
Beau Friedlander


Beau Friedlander Beau Friedlander BeauFriedlander Twitter

Beau Friedlander is an American writer, publisher, and media consultant. He was the founder of Context Books, an award-winning small press, and editor-in-chief at Air America and has garnered notoriety as a provocateur for progressive causes.

Contents

First published in the early 1990s in the United Kingdom, most notably in the May Anthology of Oxford and Cambridge Poetry edited by Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney (under the name E.B. Friedlander), Friedlander’s writing has appeared in many publications, including the Huffington Post, where he is a regular contributor.

Education

Beau Friedlander received a B.A. in Literature and Languages from Bennington College, a M.A. in English Romanticism from Oxford University and a M. Phil. in Comparative Literature and Scandinavian Studies from Columbia University.

Career

In 1998, Friedlander started Context Books, an independent press. He was twenty-seven.

In 1999, Friedlander and Context Books came to public attention when he acquired a manuscript from Theodore J. Kaczynski, the Unabomber. The book, in which Kaczynski argued that he was not insane, as his family had claimed during his trial, was ready to be published by Context Books when Kaczynski refused to paraphrase some letters which he did not own the copyright to. The book was never published because of these copyright issues.

Context Books published several award-winning works of literary fiction by authors including David Means, David Marshall Chan, and Daniel Quinn. Nonfiction authors included Derrick Jensen and John Bonifaz. The publishing house won several national awards, including The Los Angeles Times Book Prize (2000) for Assorted Fire Events. The New York Times singled out two anti-war books published by the publisher that "emerged from, and then codified opposition to the war in Iraq." War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know by William Rivers Pitt was an international bestseller.

In 2008, he became the editor-in-chief at Air America (radio network), a progressive radio network.

Beau Friedlander’s writing has appeared in Harper's Magazine, Time Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, The Paris Review, The Huffington Post, the Air America (radio network) website, The Dominion, as well as several anthologies and journals.

Glenn Beck Controversy

Friedlander was at the center of controversy on the internet in 2010 when he publicly offered to broker a deal for $100,000 on the Huffington Post for anyone who could produce a sex tape of Glenn Beck. Despite his initial stated intention for the article to be a satire in the context of Andrew Breitbart's offer of $100,000 for an archive of progressive listserv messages, the article created a firestorm which led to the Huffington Post's pulling the article and requiring Friedlander's posts to be reviewed by an editor before being publicly viewable.

Friedlander later posted an apology, stating: "I was actually trying to mimic what I saw as the way right wingers go about these matters, and by misapprehending the way they do things, I went too far. (I offered to broker a deal for anyone who had damaging media pertaining to Glenn Beck.) First, I owe Glenn Beck an apology. I crossed the line. On the off chance something comes in over the transom...scratch that; I'll delete the email account. Problem solved. I meant to tilt at a windmill in the post, and I planted my lance in the dirt."

Book

Friedlander co-wrote The Butler's Child, an autobiography by Lewis M. Steel (2016).

Board Memberships

He became a board member of the Evergreen Review in 2011.

Personal life

Originally from Connecticut, Friedlander lives in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He is divorced, with two children.

References

Beau Friedlander Wikipedia