D. Watkins
D. Watkins
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D. Watkins

Dwight "D." or "Doc" Watkins (born February 10) is an author, HBO writer, and professor at The University of Baltimore.

Watkins is a professor at the University of Baltimore and New York Times bestselling author from East Baltimore.

Watkins attended Paul Laurence Dunbar High School. At eighteen, after losing his brother and best friend, Watkins began to use and sell narcotics. After a handful of "fateful encounters", he used his illicit profits to buy a bar. Watkins beat addiction, the streets and graduated from Johns Hopkins University, which inducted him into its prestigious Society of Scholars and named him a Distinguished Alumnus. He married lawyer Caron Brace in August 2019. In 2020, Watkins won City Lit's Dambach Award for literary service. In 2021 Watkins received the MLA William Wilson Maryland Author Award. Watkins is the writer of Carmelo Anthony's bestselling memoir Where Tomorrows Aren't Promised: A Memoir of Survival and Hope and staff writer on David Simon's HBO miniseries We Own This City.

Watkins holds a Masters in Education from Johns Hopkins University, and an MFA in creative writing from University of Baltimore.

In 2024 Watkins was named a Gordon Parks Fellow. He also won a James Beard Media award for his Salon essay “Navigating the new sober boom, where a person’s sobriety is as unique as their fingerprint,” in addition to a Vernon Jarrett Medal for Journalistic Excellence.

Watkins first book, The Beastside: Living (and Dying) While Black in America was published in 2015 under David Talbot and Skyhorse Publishing's investigative book imprint, Hot Books. The Beast Side tells a tale of two Baltimores, taking an in-depth look at systemic racism and the failure of the education system, particularly for black men. In 2016, The Beastside was a Hurston/Wright Legacy Award nominee.

The Cook Up: A Crack Rock Memoir, published in 2016 by Grand Central Publishing, is a memoir that details the operations of a drug empire following Watkins' brother Bip's death, his acceptance to college, and the struggle to leave the trade behind. It was named as an editor's pick by The New York Times in May 2016. Kirkus Reviews described the book as "A familiar story to fans of The Wire, but Watkins provides a gritty, vivid first-person document of a desperate demographic." In 2017, The Cook Up was a Books for a Better Life Award Finalist.

We Speak For Ourselves is Watkins' third book, published in April 2019 by Atria is a collection of essays showcasing black voices in east Baltimore. We Speak For Ourselves was the 2020 selection for the Enoch Pratt Free Library "One Book Baltimore".

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