Name Edward Renehan, | Role Writer | |
![]() | ||
People also search for Cornelius Vanderbilt, Artie Traum, Samuel Crompton, Steven L. Jones, Liz Sonneborn, Brenda Lange Books The Dark Genius Of Wall Street, Commodore: The Life of Cornelius, The lion\'s pride, John Burroughs: An Ameri, Pete Seeger Vs the Un‑A |
Edward John Renehan Jr. (born c 1956) is an American publisher, consultant, writer, and former professional musician.
Contents
Early life and music
Renehan grew up in the Long Island village of Valley Stream, New York, where he attended school with future actor/director Steve Buscemi, and at age 13 began learning the guitar. He studied blues guitar with the Reverend Gary Davis in New York as a teenager. By 20, he was playing and recording with folksingers Pete Seeger and Don McLean, among others. In 1976, he and Seeger recorded "Fifty Sail on Newburgh Bay: Hudson Valley Songs Old & New Sung by Pete Seeger and Ed Renehan."
In his early twenties he performed with Happy Traum, Artie Traum and others at various venues and folk festivals in the North East.
Publishing
Renehan graduated from State University of New York at New Paltz. He thereafter worked for several New York publishing companies, focusing on the developing domain of digital publishing, including e-publishing and print-on-demand (POD) technologies. His tenure included 7 years as Director of Computer Publishing Programs for MBCI/Macmillan, now a part of Bookspan.
From 1994, he worked as an independent consultant and author, including writing books on the Kennedys, Jay Gould, Cornelius Vanderbilt and John Burroughs, as well as best-selling books about computers and computing. During this period he wrote books published by Doubleday, Crown, Oxford University Press, Basic Books, McGraw Hill, Simon & Schuster, Chelsea House, and other firms.
In 2010 Renehan founded New Street Communications, an enterprise focused on audio, digital, and POD editions of books in a range of fields. The firm includes two subsidiaries: Dark Hall Press (which publishes original horror and science fiction titles), and New Street Nautical Audio, which publishes sailing related audiobooks. According to a July 2013 report in the Providence Business News, the combined New Street firms had revenues of more than $200,000 in the 2012 fiscal year, which was the enterprise's second full year of operation. As of June 2015, the firm had 85 titles in print.
Bipolar disorder
In 2006, during an extreme manic period symptomatic of Bipolar Disorder, Renehan took a letter by President Lincoln to which he had no right, and sold it at auction. After receiving treatment for his previously-undiagnosed Manic Depression (subsequently verified by a court-appointed forensic psychiatrist), Renehan brought his action (heretofore unnoticed) to the attention of authorities, and facilitated the return of the document. In September 2008, Renehan was fined $85,000. Biographer T.J. Stiles cast doubts on the accuracy of certain claims in Renehan's book about Cornelius Vanderbilt, which was written during Renehan's manic period. Renehan has written about his manic depression.
Family and affiliations
Renehan is married and lives in the village of Wickford, Rhode Island. He is the father of two grown children, and a grandfather. He has served on several nonprofit boards, including the Hudson River Sloop Clearwater. He is active in the Electronic Frontier Foundation - the co-founder of which, John Perry Barlow, sits on the New Street Editorial Board - and with Stewart Brand and others is a charter/founding member of The Long Now Foundation. He is an avid sailor.