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Roger Angell
Born September 19, 1920 (1920-09-19) (age 89)
New York, New York, United States
Occupation Author
Nationality American
Genres Sports

Roger Angell (born September 19, 1920), is a fiction editor and regular contributor at The New Yorker. He has written many memorable essays on baseball as well as numerous fiction, non-fiction and criticism pieces. Angell has been called "the best baseball writer ever" for his stylish, intelligent prose.[citation needed]

Angell is the son of editor and author Katharine Sergeant Angell White and the stepson of renowned essayist E. B. White. He is a 1938 graduate of the Pomfret School.

[edit] Essays and books

Angell's earliest published works were pieces of short fiction and personal narratives. Several of these pieces were collected in The Stone Arbor and Other Stories (1960) and A Day in the Life of Roger Angell (1970, ISBN 0-670-25916-0).

He first wrote professionally about baseball in 1962, when he was invited by The New Yorker — where his mother Katherine S. White and stepfather E. B. White were editors, from the 1920s through the 1970s — to travel to Florida to write a few pieces about spring training.

Since then, Angell has translated a lifetime passion for baseball into a steady stream of elegantly written essays, most of which were originally published in The New Yorker, where he has worked as an editor since 1956. Many of these essays have been collected in a series of critically acclaimed, best-selling books:

A Pitcher's Story (2001, ISBN 0-446-52768-8) is the book-length result of a year that Angell spent speaking with New York Yankees pitcher David Cone and Cone's family, friends and coaches.

[edit] Sources

  • Eschholz, Paul; and Alfred Rosa (eds.) (2002). Subjects/Strategies: A Writer's Reader (9th ed. ed.). Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 0-312-39109-9. 

[edit] Links




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