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The Best American Magazine Writing 2005

By American Society of Magazine Editors
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Saturday, October 15 2005
Uniformly excellent collection of the winners and finalists of this year's National Magazine Awards.

For fans of the contemporary essay, 2005, as represented by this collection, was a very good year; ASME's selections are stellar. Predictably, much of the work singled

out for recognition could be described as "muscular" journalism, concerned with the American justice system, international conflict, sports, the space program. A particularly searing pair were both published in the New Yorker: Seymour Hersh's painful "Torture at Abu Ghraib" and Samantha Powers's "Dying in Darfur." American injustice is highlighted in "Innocence Lost," by Nina Martin, for San Francisco Magazine, and "The Wronged Man," by Andrew Corsello, for GQ, about the 20-year imprisonment of an innocent man and the roadblocks thrown up by the court system as he worked toward freedom. The scientific sphere is covered by "Home," published in Esquire, in which Chris Jones writes powerfully of the astronauts who were nearly stranded in space after the explosion of the space shuttle Columbia. Stem-cell research is addressed by James McManus in "Please Stand by While the Age of Miracles Is Briefly Suspended," for Esquire. New York City gets the nod in Adam Gopnik's "Times Regained," his thoughts on Times Square, for the New Yorker, and Jed Perl's "Modern Immaturity," a critique of the new Museum of Modern Art, for The New Republic. There are profiles of two very different men, both equally possessed by their calling: Ned Zeman's "The Man Who Loved Grizzlies," for Vanity Fair, covers the life and death of Timothy Treadwell, the man who lived among bears in Alaska, and Ian Parker's "The Gift," for the New Yorker, centers on Zell Kravinsky, a man who wants to give away everything he has, including unnecessary bodily organs.

The best works of the year, cherry-picked and suitably delicious. The only quibble: Of 17 writers featured, only three are female.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • Awards: this year's winners of the Pulitzers, the duPonts, and the National Magazine...
  • The Pulitzer Prizes Public Service Los Angeles Times FINALISTS: The Orange County Register; Pensacola (Florida) News Journal Breaking News Reporting The Star-Ledger (Newark, New Jersey) ......
  • 1998 National Magazine Awards: The Stories Behind The Stories That Won
  • The winners of the 1998 National Magazine Awards include perennials such as 'The New Yorker,' 'The Atlantic,' 'Harper's' and 'The Sciences.' But also among the ......
  • NOTES FROM THE FIELD
  • Tim Griffin has been appointed the new Editor-in-Chief of Artforum International magazine. Griffin, 33, joined Artforum in 2002; he worked briefly as US Reviews Editor ......
  • The King's Evil
  • Joseph S. Malderoyce ("king's evil"), at 17, has spent four years thinking himself a painter. But visits to a Mondrian exhibit at the Museum of ......
  • CHARITY EVENT
  • Jim Rosenfield, co-anchor of WNBC Channel 4's Live at Five in New York, will be master of ceremonies at the annual John A. Reisenbach Foundation ......
  • W Hotel San Francisco
  • Hornberger + Worstell had been developing the design for a 31-story tower on a prestigious corner site for five years before Starwood decided to make ......
  • onsiteeye in the sky
  • San Francisco's boutique Hotel Palomar was looking for a memorable way to celebrate the local Museum of Modern Art's exhibition of the work of renowned ......
  • Tuned In: Television
  • MUSIC VIDEO EXHIBIT: Music videos get the historical treatment when the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York presents its "Golden Oldies of Music ......
  • Strange Terrain
  • Landscape architecture is a perpetual dialogue between artifice and nature. A current set of five projects in the San Francisco Bay Area attempts a reversal ......
  • Roy Huggins Dies; Influential Writer-producer
  • Roy Huggins, the pioneering and prolific TV writer-producer who created such influential classics as "The Fugitive," "Maverick" and "The Rockford Files" and was a mentor ......
  • Editor's note.
  • Still reproductions from the films discussed in this issue were made possible through the cooperation of the Museum of Modern Art Still Archives (New York), ......
  • Terence Riley to Take Helm at MAM
  • (MAM) has announced that curator Terence Riley will become the museum's new director, effective March 15. Riley, 51, has served as chief curator of New ......
  • Moma Gets Assist From Murray For Tribute To Coppola
  • You might expect a Museum of Modern Art benefit hosted by the New York Times' Elvis Mitchell to be a staid affair, but funnyman Bill ......
  • 'FILTER MINI', LOS ANGELES
  • More than 800 see-and-be-scenesters gathered Aug. 26 at Los Angeles' Museum of Modern Art's Basquiat exhibit to celebrate the first birthday of pint-size pop-culture magazine ......
  • Modern New York
  • The renovated and expanded Museum of Modern Art is back in Manhattan.

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