IN STORES NOW!![[The Big Fix Book Cover]](http://www.williamgreider.com/images/the_big_fix_cover.gif)
The Big Fix:
How the Pharmaceutical Industry Rips Off American Consumers
By Katharine Greider
(my daughter)
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A Quick Résumé
I am an "old media" type -- 40-plus years as a reporter
for newspapers, magazines, TV and books -- who is trying to
find my way in this "new media" world. I have a hopeful notion
that the Internet can sustain continuing conversations --
connections that leap over the usual obstacles and boundaries,
that educate us on both ends and maybe even add something to
the new political associations that are already fast
developing from Internet traffic. I have spent my adult life
tramping around the United States and (to a lesser degree) the
world as an inquiring reporter, encountering people of every
station from impoverished peasants to important financiers and
statesmen. On the whole, this experience has confirmed my
inherited conviction that people are capable everywhere in the
world and most try to do the best they can, given their
circumstances. Americans in particular are a gorgeously
diverse and interesting people, mostly decent and serious
about life, funny and open, inventive and generous, whatever
their situations.
I am national affairs correspondent for
The Nation, the largest
and oldest of America's political weeklies. I live and work in
Washington DC (office address: 1025 Connecticut Avenue NW
#205, Washington DC 20036). My wife Linda Furry Greider is
also a magazine writer; we have been married for 42 years (she
was a child bride). Our children, their spouses and our four
grandchildren live in New York City. I was raised in Wyoming,
Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati, and educated in public schools
there and at Princeton University (1958).
My new book (September 2003 from Simon & Schuster) is
The Soul
of Capitalism: Opening Paths to A Moral Economy. It
describes why American capitalism produces so much human
discontent and social injury alongside the abundance. It
explains how Americans can exert decisive influence to change
the economic system's operating values and power structure, to
disarm capitalism's destructive collisions and its collateral
consequences for people and nation. Many smart citizens are
already at work on profound reforms.
My career:
I am a former assistant managing editor for national
news at the Washington Post, where I was a national
correspondent and later Sunday columnist for nearly 15 years.
My first job (after the Army) was with the
Wheaton Daily Journal in
Wheaton, Illinois, where I met Linda. We moved next to the
Louisville Times in
Louisville, Kentucky, where our children were born. The
Times and
Courier
Journal sent us to
Washington where I was correspondent for both until joining
the Washington Post.. We
have lived in the nation's capital since 1966, but in recent
years spend as much time as we can in Vermont where we have an
old mountainside farm, house and garden and woods.
Before joining The Nation,
I wrote a regular column and features for
Rolling Stone magazine
from the early 1980s to 1999. I have served as on-air
correspondent for six television documentaries for Frontline
on PBS. One of these, "Return to Beirut," won an Emmy in 1985.
Major books:
One World, Ready or Not:
The Manic Logic of Global Capitalism, 1997, S&S. Based on
reporting on three continents, it explores the drama of
industrial revolution and globalization in human terms, from
peasants becoming industrial workers to the highest realms of
global finance. It explains the underlying economic and
political vulnerabilities that threaten the global system, but
also the potential for a new more humane internationalism that
serves both rich and poor alike. Published in UK, Germany,
Brazil, Greece and China.
Who Will Tell the People:
The Betrayal of American Democracy, 1992, S&S. A close-in
account of how politics and representative self-government
have decayed at the national level, based on my many years of
Washington reporting. Published in Japan, 20 weeks on the New
York Times bestseller list.
Secrets of the Temple:
How the Federal Reserve Runs the Country, 1987, S&S,
remains the definitive popular study of America's central bank
and how Chairman Paul Volcker steered the U.S. economy through
the volatile 1980s. Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book
Award.
Fortress America: The
American Military and the Consequences of Peace, 1998,
PublicAffairs. A tour of the military-industrial complex --
the troops and the factories -- that explained post-Cold War
dilemmas that remain unresolved.
The Education of David
Stockman and Other Americans, 1982, Dutton, a
controversial account of Reaganomics that appeared in the
Atlantic Monthly and was based on my long-running interviews
with Reagan's budget director. It revealed the chaos and
illusions of Reagan's fiscal policy and the broken promises in
his legislative triumphs, foreshadowing the massive federal
deficts that persisted for nearly two decades.
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