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David Grann
David Grann
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David Elliot Grann (born March 10, 1967) is an American journalist, a staff writer for The New Yorker, and author.

Key Information

His first book, The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon, was published by Doubleday in February 2009. After its first week of publication, it debuted on The New York Times bestseller list at No. 4[1] and later reached No. 1.[2] Grann's articles have been collected in several anthologies, including What We Saw: The Events of September 11, 2001, The Best American Crime Writing of 2004 and 2005, and The Best American Sports Writing of 2003 and 2006.[3] He has written for The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and The Weekly Standard.[3]

According to a profile in Slate, Grann has a reputation as a "workhorse reporter", which has made him a popular journalist who "inspires a devotion in readers that can border on the obsessive."[4]

Early life

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Grann was born on March 10, 1967, to Phyllis E. Grann and Victor Grann. His mother is the former CEO of Putnam Penguin and the first woman CEO of a major publishing firm.[5] His father was an oncologist and Director of the Bennett Cancer Center in Stamford, Connecticut. Grann has two siblings, Edward and Alison.[6]

Career

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He graduated from Connecticut College in 1989 with a B.A. in Government.[7] While still in college, Grann received a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship and conducted research in Mexico, where he began his career as a freelance journalist.[7]

He received a master's degree in international relations from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University in 1993.[3][8] At that point primarily interested in fiction, Grann hoped to develop a career as a novelist.[9]

In 1994 he was hired as a copy editor at The Hill, a Washington, D.C.–based newspaper covering the United States Congress.[3] The same year, Grann earned a master's degree in creative writing from Boston University,[3][8] where he taught courses in creative writing and fiction.[9] He was named The Hill's executive editor in 1995.[3][7] In 1996, Grann became a senior editor at The New Republic.[3][8] He joined The New Yorker in 2003 as a staff writer.[3][7] He was a finalist for the Michael Kelly Award in 2005.[10]

In 2009, he received both the George Polk Award and Sigma Delta Chi Award for his New Yorker piece "Trial By Fire", about Cameron Todd Willingham. Another New Yorker investigative article, "The Mark of a Masterpiece", raised questions about the methods of Peter Paul Biro, who claimed to use fingerprints to help authenticate lost masterpieces.[11] Biro sued Grann and The New Yorker for libel,[12][13] but the case was summarily dismissed.[14][15] The article was a finalist for the 2010 National Magazine Award.[16]

The Lost City of Z

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External videos
video icon Presentation by Grann on The Lost City of Z, February 24, 2009, C-SPAN

Grann's 2009 non-fiction book The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon recounts the odyssey of the notable British explorer, Captain Percy Fawcett who, in 1925, disappeared with his son in the Amazon while looking for the Lost City of Z. For decades, explorers and scientists have tried to find evidence of both his party and the Lost City of Z. Grann also trekked into the Amazon. In his book, he reveals new evidence about how Fawcett died and shows that "Z" may have existed.[17][18][19]

Killers of the Flower Moon

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External videos
video icon Presentation by Grann on Killers of the Flower Moon, May 9, 2017, C-SPAN

In March 2014, Grann said he was working on a new book about the Osage Indian murders, considered "one of the most sinister crimes in American history."[20] His book Killers of the Flower Moon: An American Crime and the Birth of the FBI was published in 2017, chronicling "a tale of murder, betrayal, heroism and a nation's struggle to leave its frontier culture behind and enter the modern world."[21] It was a finalist for the 2017 National Book Award[22] and later became #1 on The New York Times bestseller list.[23] The film adaptation, Killers of the Flower Moon, was directed by Martin Scorsese and released in October 2023.[24]

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder

[edit]
External videos
video icon Presentation by Grann on The Wager, May 1, 2023, C-SPAN

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder, was published in April 2023. It debuted at #1 on The New York Times bestseller list and the hardcover stayed on the list for 65 weeks.[25] A reviewer in The Guardian wrote, “The Wager is one of the finest nonfiction books I've ever read. I can only offer the highest praise a writer can give: endless envy, as deep and salty as the sea."[26] Former President Barack Obama selected The Wager as one of his summer reading books, a popular booklist he shares annually.[27]

Other books

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External videos
video icon Presentation by Grann on The White Darkness, August 31, 2019, C-SPAN

A collection of twelve previously published Grann essays, The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession, was published in March 2010.

Another book, The White Darkness, was published in October 2018.

Personal life

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Grann has two children. As of 2017 he resided in New York.[28]

Bibliography

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Adaptations

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Forthcoming:

Awards

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
David Grann (born 1967) is an American journalist and nonfiction author renowned for his immersive investigations into historical mysteries, explorations, and crimes, often blending meticulous archival research with on-the-ground reporting. A at since 2003, he has earned two Sigma Delta Chi Awards for excellence in journalism from the . Grann's breakthrough book, The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon (2009), chronicles British explorer Percy Fawcett's century-old quest for a vanished civilization in the Amazon, drawing on Fawcett's diaries and Grann's own expeditions to reconstruct the perils of early 20th-century . His 2017 work, Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI, exposes the systematic murders of oil-wealthy Osage Native Americans in 1920s and the nascent FBI's role in the case, serving as the basis for Martin Scorsese's 2023 film adaptation starring and , which received ten Academy Award nominations. More recent titles include The Wager: A Tale of , and Murder (2023), a recounting the 1740s wreck of a British naval vessel and the ensuing survival ordeal and , which topped The New York Times nonfiction lists and highlighted themes of human endurance and institutional betrayal. Grann holds a B.A. in government from , an M.A. in from Tufts University's Fletcher School, and an M.F.A. in from , credentials that underpin his rigorous, evidence-driven narrative style.

Early life and education

Childhood and family influences

David Grann was born on March 10, 1967, in and grew up in , as the middle child in a family of three siblings, including an older brother, Edward, and a sister, Alison. His father, Victor Grann, was a prominent oncologist specializing in , while his mother, , was a trailblazing publishing executive who became the first female CEO of a major American trade publisher, , where she oversaw bestsellers by authors such as . The Grann household, immersed in intellectual pursuits, exposed young David to a world of and narratives, shaped by his mother's profession in an industry centered on and editorial rigor. Phyllis Grann, known for her sharp instincts in spotting commercial hits, reportedly advised her son against entering writing, cautioning, "Don’t become a ," due to the field's uncertainties. Nevertheless, Grann exhibited an early affinity for writing, maintaining a personal journal during his childhood and receiving as gifts from his grandmother on birthdays and holidays, which nurtured his fascination with literature. His father's adventurous side, including recreational sailing ventures that occasionally courted danger such as approaching hurricanes, reflected a family tolerance for risk that paralleled the exploratory themes in Grann's later nonfiction works, though direct causation remains unstated in accounts of his development. This upbringing in a dual-professional household—medicine's precision alongside publishing's narrative drive—laid a foundation for Grann's eventual pivot to investigative journalism, despite initial familial reservations about the profession.

Academic background and early interests

Grann earned a degree in government from in 1989. During his undergraduate years, he focused on and received a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, which funded a year of in exploring indigenous myths and legends. Following his bachelor's degree, Grann pursued graduate studies, obtaining a in from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at . He later completed a in from , reflecting an emerging interest in narrative techniques that would inform his journalistic style. Grann's early academic pursuits highlighted a fascination with historical narratives, cultural stories, and investigative inquiry, as evidenced by his Watson Fellowship project on Mexican folklore, which immersed him in oral traditions and archival research methods akin to those he later employed in . This period also marked the development of his writing discipline, including journaling habits that nurtured a commitment to detailed, evidence-based storytelling over .

Professional career

Initial journalism roles

Grann began his journalism career during a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship following his graduation from Connecticut College in 1989, conducting research in Mexico where he engaged in freelance reporting. This early experience marked his initial foray into professional writing, focusing on on-the-ground reporting amid limited prior experience. After a period of struggling to establish himself, Grann secured his first full-time journalism position in 1994 as a copy editor at The Hill, a startup newspaper in Washington, D.C., dedicated to covering Capitol Hill politics. Despite his novice status, he advanced rapidly within the publication, assuming the role of executive editor from 1995 to 1996, overseeing editorial operations during the paper's formative years. In 1996, Grann transitioned to The New Republic, where he served as a senior editor until 2003, contributing to political and investigative pieces that honed his skills in long-form narrative and scrutiny of power structures. These roles at The Hill and provided foundational training in deadline-driven reporting and editorial leadership, emphasizing factual rigor over sensationalism in a competitive political media landscape.

Contributions to The New Yorker

David Grann joined The New Yorker as a in , where he has produced long-form investigative pieces characterized by meticulous , on-the-ground reporting, and narrative reconstruction of historical and criminal events. His contributions often explore themes of injustice, obsession, and human endurance, drawing on primary documents, interviews, and expeditions to illuminate overlooked or contested episodes. Several of these articles have served as foundations for his bestselling books, demonstrating their depth and evidentiary rigor. Among his early notable works is "Mysterious Circumstances: The Strange Death of a Sherlock Holmes Fanatic," published on December 13, 2004, which examined the peculiar 2004 killing of Richard S. Sage, a Holmes , and probed the intersection of and forensic evidence. In 2005, "The Lost City of Z: The Deadly Obsession to Find the Missing City of Gold" detailed explorer Percy Fawcett's 1925 disappearance in the Amazon, blending adventure history with Grann's own jungle trek to verify claims; this piece later expanded into his 2009 book. Grann's 2009 article "Trial by Fire: Did Texas Execute an Innocent Man?" scrutinized the 2004 execution of for arson-murder, citing fire science experts who debunked the prosecution's evidence as pseudoscientific, thereby challenging the reliability of forensic testimony in capital cases. Later contributions include "The Yankee Comandante," published May 21, 2012, recounting American William Morgan's role in the 1950s and his subsequent execution, based on declassified records and survivor accounts. "After a Murder Foretold," from October 18, 2011, investigated a 2005 killing predicted in a New Yorker , revealing narco-terrorism ties through police files and witness testimonies. Grann's March 1, 2017, piece "The Osage Murders and the Birth of the F.B.I." reconstructed the 1920s against Osage Indians in , using FBI archives to expose systematic poisoning and corruption; it formed the basis for his 2017 book Killers of the Flower Moon, adapted into a 2023 film by . These works have prompted reevaluations of legal and historical narratives, with "Trial by Fire" cited in debates over wrongful convictions and forensic reform.

Investigative methodology and style

David Grann employs a rigorous, multi-year investigative process characterized by immersion in primary sources and fieldwork, often transforming obscure historical events into compelling narratives. For works like The Wager, he begins with serendipitous discoveries, such as digitized journals, then expands into exhaustive archival dives, consulting muster books, logbooks, and eyewitness accounts to verify minutiae like crew deaths ("DD" for "Discharged Dead") and weather conditions. He organizes research by creating searchable digital databases of highlighted excerpts from diaries, histories, and related literature, such as naval treatises and Melville's works, which inform thematic depth without fabrication. This methodical excavation prioritizes factual fidelity, with Grann abandoning projects lacking sufficient records and cross-referencing disparate documents to reconstruct events. Fieldwork complements archival work, as Grann physically retraces subjects' paths to grasp environmental and human challenges firsthand. In , he ventured into the Brazilian Amazon, mirroring explorer Fawcett's expeditions to assess perils like disease and terrain that claimed prior searchers. Similarly, for Killers of the Flower Moon, five years of reporting included sifting unorganized FBI archives in and interviewing Osage descendants, revealing overlooked murders and systemic injustices beyond initial headlines. These immersions yield vivid, sensory details that ground his accounts, while he maintains restraint to avoid speculation, treating himself as an "excavator" of verifiable truths rather than a fabulist. Grann's narrative style integrates journalistic precision with literary craftsmanship, structuring pieces around suspenseful chapter arcs and multiple perspectives to illuminate broader human themes like obsession, , and . He appraises ideas for emotional grip and untapped layers—such as buried injustices—ensuring originality by probing for novel angles on familiar tales. Revisions involve iterative drafts refined through editor feedback, emphasizing clarity and momentum, as in prologues that hook via core conflicts before unfolding chronologically or thematically. remains obsessive, with weeks devoted to minutiae, reflecting his commitment to narrative nonfiction that prioritizes empirical rigor over embellishment. This approach, honed at , yields stories that expose historical distortions while captivating through unadorned veracity.

Major literary works

Debut book: The Lost City of Z

The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon, Grann's debut book published in 2009 by Doubleday, expands on his 2005 New Yorker article of the same title and recounts the expeditions of British explorer Percy Harrison Fawcett (1867–1925?). Fawcett, a surveyor who mapped uncharted regions of from 1906 to 1924, became convinced of an advanced pre-Columbian civilization—"Z"—in the after encountering documents and indigenous accounts suggesting sophisticated settlements defying the era's view of the jungle as inhospitable. His eight expeditions faced extreme hardships, including , , and attacks by tribes and wildlife; by 1925, Fawcett mounted a lightweight final quest with his 21-year-old son Jack and Jack's companion Raleigh Rimell, vanishing after sending last dispatches from "Dead Horse Camp" on May 29. Grann's narrative parallels Fawcett's story with his own 2005 retracing of the route into Brazil's region, relying on Fawcett's 30,000-word manuscript, diaries, and expedition logs accessed via descendants and archives. Accompanied by guides, Grann endured similar threats—piranhas, caimans, and tribespeople—while consulting anthropologists like Michael Heckenberger, whose and ground surveys revealed earthworks, moats, and roads indicative of complex societies spanning 1,300 square miles near , supporting Fawcett's hunch of anthropogenic landscape modification but not a singular El Dorado-like . Grann's investigation, informed by oral histories and forensic analysis of remains from later searches, posits Fawcett's party was killed by hostile tribesmen shortly after entering territory, contradicting romantic theories of self-sufficient survival or treasure hoarding. The book critiques the hubris of early 20th-century exploration amid colonial mapping efforts, highlighting how Fawcett's amateur status and fixation—fueled by artifacts like a gold-sealed document from —clashed with from figures like the Royal Society. It sold over a million copies, topping The New York Times bestseller list, and earned praise for its immersive reportage and archival rigor, with Kirkus Reviews lauding its "satisfyingly unexpected twists" and vivid portrayal of obsession's perils. No major factual disputes emerged, though some archaeologists note Grann's synthesis aligns with emerging evidence of Amazonian predating European contact by millennia.

Osage murders investigation: Killers of the Flower Moon

David Grann's book Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI, published in 2017, chronicles a series of murders targeting Osage Nation members in 1920s Oklahoma, where the tribe had amassed substantial oil wealth through mineral rights retained after their forced relocation. Grann's investigation centered on the "Reign of Terror," a period of systematic killings aimed at acquiring Osage headrights—shares in tribal oil revenues—often through marriage, murder, or exploitative guardianship systems imposed by federal policy that deemed Osage individuals incompetent to manage their affairs due to prevailing racial prejudices. His research revealed that white guardians, appointed to oversee Osage finances, frequently embezzled funds and facilitated dispossession, contributing to a broader culture of impunity and violence. Grann initiated his probe in 2012 at the Museum, prompted by a of a killer and a conspicuously absent display panel, which led him to archival records documenting unsolved crimes. He conducted exhaustive examinations of FBI case files from J. Edgar Hoover's early tenure, including secret testimonies, private detective reports indicating cover-ups, and Osage eyewitness accounts that exposed the murders' scale. Complementing this, Grann reviewed reports, court testimonies, and private correspondence, while interviewing descendants of both victims and perpetrators, such as Mollie Burkhart's granddaughter, to contextualize the enduring trauma. Central to Grann's narrative is the conspiracy orchestrated by cattleman William Hale and his nephew , who targeted Mollie Burkhart's family: her sister Anna Brown was shot in 1921, her mother poisoned, and another sister, Rita Smith, killed in a 1923 house explosion. The FBI's intervention in 1923, under agent Tom White's undercover team, marked its inaugural major homicide investigation, leading to Hale and Burkhart's convictions in 1929 for orchestrating at least some of the killings. However, Grann's analysis demonstrated that the bureau resolved only a fraction of the cases, with official tallies citing around two dozen murders while evidence pointed to scores or potentially hundreds more unreported or unprosecuted deaths amid widespread complicity. In the book's final section, Grann retraced White's steps, uncovering additional layers of conspiracy that the FBI overlooked or suppressed, including inter-tribal suspicions and external opportunists profiting from the chaos. This phase highlighted systemic failures in law enforcement and the limitations of Hoover's nascent organization, which prioritized institutional growth over exhaustive justice, leaving many perpetrators unaccounted for. Grann's findings underscore how economic incentives intertwined with racial animus fueled the killings, transforming Osage prosperity into a vulnerability that persisted beyond the documented trials.

Shipwreck narrative: The Wager

In The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder, published in April 2023, David Grann recounts the 1741 ordeal of the British warship HMS Wager, which wrecked off the desolate coast of during Commodore George Anson's expedition against Spanish Pacific holdings in the (1739–1748). The vessel, carrying approximately 250 men under Captain , struck rocks on May 14, 1741, amid storms near the Gulf of Saint George, stranding survivors on a barren lacking fresh water and game, where and rapidly decimated their numbers to fewer than 100 within weeks. Grann structures the narrative around conflicting survivor accounts, drawing from primary documents such as midshipman John Bulkeley's 1743 publication A Voyage to the South Seas in His Majesty's Ships the Wager and Tryal*, which detailed a mutiny led by Bulkeley and gunner John Cummins against Cheap's authority, and Cheap's own 1743 counter-narrative co-authored with Robert Byron. The mutineers, rejecting Cheap's orders to march south for rescue, commandeered a jury-rigged craft and sailed 3,000 miles north through treacherous waters, reaching Valdivia, Chile, in June 1742 after losing over half their party to privation and violence, including the shooting death of Cheap's lieutenant during a dispute. Meanwhile, Cheap and a remnant group, including surgeon Robert Robertson, endured southward treks and interactions with indigenous Chono people before splitting, with some eventually returning to England after four years at sea. These rival testimonies fueled a 1746 court-martial in London, where the mutineers were acquitted amid debates over command legitimacy and imperial narratives of heroism. Grann's five-year research, involving archival dives into logbooks, Admiralty records, and eyewitness journals housed in institutions like the British Library, underscores discrepancies in the sources—such as Bulkeley's omission of crew executions—to probe how imperial Britain shaped "official" history, privileging Anson's sanitized success over the Wager's chaos. He reconstructs visceral details, like crews boiling leather for sustenance and resorting to cannibalism rumors, without endorsing unverified claims, emphasizing empirical limits of 18th-century records amid disease-ravaged voyages where over 1,300 of Anson's original 1,800 men perished overall. The book critiques how power dynamics and survival imperatives distorted truth, mirroring Grann's broader investigative ethos of sifting biased or incomplete testimonies for causal insights into human fracture under extremity.

Other non-fiction books and collections

The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession (2010) is a collection of twelve essays originally published in , exploring themes of deception, obsession, and unresolved mysteries. The title essay investigates the 2004 death of , a leading scholar found strangled in his apartment with a shoelace, amid suspicions of tied to his efforts to block the sale of Arthur Conan Doyle's papers. Other pieces cover topics such as a killer squid hunt in the Pacific, underground tunnel networks beneath , and a involving a man accused of faking his own death multiple times. Published by Knopf, the book received praise for Grann's narrative style that blends rigorous reporting with psychological depth, though some critics noted its episodic structure lacked the cohesion of a single narrative. The Old Man and the Gun (2018), a slim volume expanded from Grann's 2003 New Yorker profile, chronicles the life of , a prolific bank robber who escaped prison 18 times and continued heists into his 70s before his 2018 capture. Tucker's escapes included a 1977 helicopter breakout from San Quentin and a 1986 wooden-glider flight from , feats enabled by his meticulous planning and affable demeanor during robberies, where he often apologized to victims. Drawing on interviews and court records, Grann portrays Tucker's charm and code of non-violence, attributing his persistence to a romanticized ethos rather than financial desperation. The , published by Knopf, inspired a 2018 film starring , who announced it as his final acting role. The White Darkness (2018) details the Antarctic expeditions of British explorer Henry Worsley, a former officer obsessed with Ernest Shackleton's legacy. First published as a New Yorker article in February 2018, the book recounts Worsley's 2008-2009 trek across the continent with teammates, covering 921 miles in 73 days amid blizzards and , followed by his fatal 2015 solo attempt to cross unsupported, where he collapsed 30 miles from the goal due to and . Grann accesses Worsley's diaries and interviews family, highlighting his psychological drive rooted in childhood hero-worship of Shackleton and a need to prove resilience after military service in the . Illustrated with photographs, the Doubleday edition emphasizes the physiological toll of extreme cold—Worsley lost over 50 pounds—and critiques the romanticization of such quests against modern survival data showing high failure rates in solo polar travel.

Magazine articles and shorter works

Notable New Yorker pieces

Grann's article "The Lost City of Z," published on September 19, 2005, chronicles British explorer Percy Fawcett's century-old quest for a fabled ancient civilization in the , blending historical research with Grann's own expedition to retrace Fawcett's path, which ultimately vanished in 1925. The piece, expanded into his 2009 book of the same name, drew on Fawcett's journals and maps to explore themes of obsession and the clash between European and indigenous knowledge, earning praise for its narrative drive and evidentiary rigor. "Trial by Fire," appearing in the September 7, 2009, issue, investigates the 2004 execution of in for arson-murder of his three daughters, revealing how discredited forensic techniques—later debunked by fire scientists—underpinned his conviction despite no of guilt. Grann's reporting, which included interviews with experts and review of trial records, highlighted systemic flaws in arson investigation and , prompting gubernatorial reviews and citations in legal reforms, though authorities upheld the conviction. The article, reprinted in Grann's 2010 collection , has been credited with advancing scrutiny of flawed science in convictions. In "The Yankee Comandante," published May 28, 2012, Grann details the life of , an American adventurer who joined Fidel Castro's revolution against in 1957, rising to command a rebel column before his 1961 execution amid suspicions of disloyalty. Drawing on declassified documents, interviews with survivors, and Morgan's letters, the piece portrays his idealism turning to disillusionment with , offering a counterfactual lens on Cuban history without Castro's U.S. ally. It underscored Grann's method of humanizing obscure figures through archival depth. "The Chameleon," from the 2010 collection but originating as a 2008 New Yorker piece, profiles serial impostor Frédéric Bourdin, who assumed the identity of a missing American teen in , exposing vulnerabilities in missing-persons investigations and the psychological allure of deception. Grann's account, based on Bourdin's confessions and law enforcement records, illustrates how personal fabrications unravel under scrutiny, contributing to discussions on . Grann's "The Osage Murders and the Birth of the F.B.I.," excerpted in the March 1, 2017, issue ahead of his book Killers of the Flower Moon, reconstructs the systematic poisoning of Osage Indians for their oil wealth, crediting Hoover's nascent bureau with cracking the cases amid widespread corruption. The reporting, reliant on tribal records and FBI files, revealed over two dozen unsolved murders, challenging narratives of early 20th-century justice.

Themes in journalism

Grann's journalism recurrently examines obsession as a driving force in human endeavors, portraying individuals consumed by quests that blur the line between ambition and peril. In his 2004 New Yorker piece on hunters, he details the monomaniacal pursuits of scientists and adventurers risking in remote oceans to document the elusive creature, highlighting how fixation can yield discovery yet exact profound personal costs. This theme recurs in explorations of historical figures driven to extremes, such as explorers enduring isolation and , as chronicled in articles like "The White Darkness," where Grann dissects the psychological imperatives behind such self-imposed ordeals. A core focus lies in and systemic injustice, where Grann scrutinizes failures in legal and investigative processes through meticulous archival review and interviews. His 2009 article "Trial by Fire" reconstructs the case of , executed in in 2004 for arson murders based on now-discredited forensic methods, arguing that junk science contributed to a probable wrongful conviction and exposing flaws in protocols. Similarly, in "The Devil and Sherlock Holmes," a collection of his reporting, Grann weaves tales of murders intertwined with deception, such as a Polish immigrant's real-life killing mirroring a fictional , underscoring how obsession with crime narratives can distort truth-seeking. Grann's pieces often probe survival and historical mutiny against institutional authority, revealing the fragility of order in extreme circumstances. Reporting on shipwrecks and expeditions draws from primary logs and survivor accounts to illustrate endurance amid scarcity and betrayal, as in narratives of 18th-century British naval disasters where crews fractured into violence, challenging imperial myths of cohesion. These works emphasize forgotten histories and the contestation of official records, with Grann employing on-site verification to resurrect marginalized perspectives, such as indigenous knowledge dismissed by colonizers or suppressed evidence in criminal probes. Through this lens, his journalism critiques how power shapes storytelling, prioritizing empirical reconstruction over accepted lore.

Adaptations of works

Film and television adaptations

Grann's 2009 book The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon was adapted into a of the same name, directed by James Gray and released on April 14, 2017, in the United States. The film stars as British explorer , with and in supporting roles, and focuses on Fawcett's expeditions into the Amazon in search of a legendary ancient city. Gray's adaptation emphasizes Fawcett's personal motivations and the era's colonial attitudes, diverging slightly from Grann's journalistic reconstruction by heightening dramatic elements of family dynamics and societal skepticism. His 2017 book Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI served as the basis for Martin Scorsese's 2023 film adaptation, released on October 20, 2023, after premiering at the Cannes Film Festival on May 20, 2023. Scorsese co-wrote the screenplay with Eric Roth, starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Ernest Burkhart, Lily Gladstone as Mollie Burkhart, and Robert De Niro as William Hale; the production involved extensive consultation with Osage Nation members for historical accuracy. The film shifts narrative focus toward the personal relationship between Ernest and Mollie compared to Grann's broader investigative scope on the FBI's role, while retaining core details of the Osage Reign of Terror murders between 1921 and 1926. Several of Grann's New Yorker magazine articles have also been adapted into films. His 2003 piece "The Chameleon" inspired the 2016 thriller , directed by Alexandros Avranas and starring as a investigating a crime mirroring a novelist's book. The 2009 article "Trial by Fire," examining the 2004 execution of for arson-murder amid disputed forensic evidence, was adapted into the 2018 TV movie Trial by Fire, directed by and starring and Jack O'Connell. Additionally, his 2010 profile "The Old Man and the Gun" on escaped convict became the basis for the 2018 film The Old Man and the Gun, directed by and starring in his final role, with and . Upcoming adaptations include a film version of Grann's 2023 book The Wager: A Tale of , and Murder, to be directed by with starring, produced for Apple Original Films; announced in July 2022, it recounts the 1741 wreck of the HMS Wager and ensuing conflicts among survivors. His 2018 book The White Darkness, profiling Antarctic explorer Henry Worsley, is in development as a limited television series for Apple TV+. No completed television adaptations of Grann's longer works exist as of October 2025. Grann's investigation into the Osage murders in Killers of the Flower Moon (2017) elevated a largely forgotten episode of American history—the systematic killing of Osage Nation members between 1921 and 1926 to seize oil headrights worth millions—into national discourse, transforming it from an obscure injustice into a emblematic case of racial exploitation and early FBI involvement. Prior to the book's publication, the "Reign of Terror" had faded from public memory despite claiming over 60 confirmed victims, with Grann's archival research uncovering suppressed documents that revealed the scale of the conspiracy. This narrative reframing prompted discussions on Indigenous dispossession and historical erasure, influencing academic and public examinations of Native American trauma. Similarly, The Lost City of Z (2009), chronicling Percy Fawcett's 1925 disappearance while seeking an advanced Amazonian civilization, revived fascination with early 20th-century exploration, blending empirical archaeology with mythic adventure to challenge stereotypes of "primitive" indigenous societies. Grann's retracing of Fawcett's routes exposed evidence of pre-Columbian settlements, aligning with later findings like the sites, and popularized debates on lost civilizations in . The work's emphasis on primary journals and fieldwork has echoed in contemporary adventure journalism, encouraging immersive reporting on remote histories. Across his oeuvre, Grann's fusion of meticulous sourcing with novelistic pacing has advanced narrative nonfiction as a vehicle for cultural reckoning, shifting popular history from dry chronicles to gripping inquiries into human ambition and deception, as seen in The Wager (2023)'s dissection of shipwreck testimonies that exposed narrative unreliability. This approach has cultivated a readership attuned to causal underpinnings of events, countering sensationalism with evidence-based realism and influencing how overlooked scandals permeate .

Personal life

Family and relationships

David Grann married Kyra Darnton, a and documentary filmmaker, on July 2, 2000, in . Darnton, daughter of journalists Nina and John Darnton, has collaborated professionally with Grann, serving as his first reader for manuscripts and providing feedback on narrative structure. Grann's parents are Phyllis Grann, a prominent book publisher who served as CEO of Putnam and later Penguin Putnam, and Dr. Victor Grann, a physician. Grann and Darnton have two children, with whom they reside in . Grann has discussed in interviews, emphasizing efforts to foster his children's interest in reading through exposure to adventure stories and historical narratives, mirroring themes in his own work. He maintains a low public profile regarding family details, consistent with his focus on professional output over personal disclosures in media appearances.

Private interests and habits

Grann maintains a relatively private , with limited public disclosures about his habits beyond those intersecting with his professional and family commitments. He has described himself as having a tendency to be obsessive, a trait that extends to his immersive but also influences his approach to daily tasks. His morning routine centers on consuming intensively, reading 5 to 10 publications daily as a self-identified news junkie, while sipping large cups of that he reheats multiple times to sustain focus amid a packed schedule. This habit supports both his and a broader , evident in his activity where he follows diverse topics including art, physics, sports, and tabloid Gothic tales, often sharing quirky or unusual content driven by a childlike . Grann exhibits restlessness, reporting difficulty sitting still for more than twenty minutes at a stretch, which leads him to intersperse sedentary periods—such as reading or writing—with short walks, as recounted in a personal essay from his . His reading preferences reflect disciplined idiosyncrasies: he avoids concurrent books in the same genre, alternating strictly between fiction (e.g., novels) and to maintain variety and depth. In family life, Grann prioritizes time with his children—son Zach and daughter Ella—working from home to be available after school, where he fosters their interest in reading by emphasizing encouragement over prescriptive guidance, viewing literacy as a foundational skill applicable across pursuits. He draws from his own childhood influences, such as The Outsiders and , to promote wide, self-directed reading rather than curated lists.

Reception, criticisms, and influence

Critical reception and achievements

David Grann's books have garnered consistent praise from critics for blending exhaustive historical research with thriller-like pacing and vivid storytelling, often drawing comparisons to adventure narratives while uncovering overlooked injustices or mysteries. His investigative approach, rooted in primary sources and on-site reporting, has been highlighted as elevating factual accounts into page-turners, as noted in reviews of works like Killers of the Flower Moon (2017), which described as surging forward with "crisp and evocative prose" enhanced by period photographs. Killers of the Flower Moon, detailing the Osage murders in 1920s Oklahoma and the FBI's origins, received particular acclaim for its meticulous documentation of systemic greed and violence, earning a finalist spot for the National Book Award in 2017 and the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Fact Crime in 2018. The book topped The New York Times bestseller list and inspired a 2023 film adaptation directed by Martin Scorsese, further amplifying its reach. Similarly, The Lost City of Z (2009), chronicling explorer Percy Fawcett's Amazon quests, was selected as one of the best books of the year by the National Book Foundation and praised by Kirkus Reviews as a "colorful tale of true adventure" marked by unexpected twists. Grann's more recent The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder (2023) continued this trajectory, with The Guardian calling it a "magnificent shipwreck epic" that probes the unreliability of historical narratives without overt judgment. His journalism has earned the George Polk Award for outstanding , recognizing pieces that expose hidden truths through dogged reporting. Additionally, Grann received a Spur Award from the , underscoring his contributions to historical . These accolades, alongside multiple New York Times #1 bestseller designations, affirm his influence in elevating .

Specific criticisms and debates

Grann's 2009 New Yorker article "Trial by Fire," which examined the 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham for the arson deaths of his three daughters, drew rebuttals from prosecutors who argued that Grann overlooked evidence of Willingham's guilt beyond the arson indicators, such as his post-fire behavior—described as remorseless and self-centered—and statements from a jailhouse informant claiming Willingham confessed. Grann countered that his reporting comprehensively addressed the prosecution's case, including the informant's incentivized testimony and character assessments rooted in subjective psychology rather than direct evidence, while emphasizing how fire science experts, including those from the National Fire Protection Association, later discredited the original arson determination as reliant on myths like multiple points of origin and poured accelerants. This piece fueled ongoing contention, with some forensic analysts upholding the original findings based on pour patterns and witness accounts of Willingham's demeanor, though a 2009 Texas Forensic Science Commission report aligned more closely with Grann's critique by faulting the junk science used. In broader terms, Grann's narrative nonfiction style has prompted discussions on the balance between storytelling and unadorned facts, particularly in accounts like Killers of the Flower Moon (2017), where Osage descendants and historians debated the emphasis on individual perpetrators versus systemic federal complicity in the murders, though Grann's archival research—drawing from over 7,000 pages of FBI documents—expanded known victim counts from dozens to potentially hundreds without embellishment. Critics of his approach, such as in responses to pieces like "The Mark of a Masterpiece?" (2010) on , have questioned over-reliance on evolving forensic methods, arguing they introduce new uncertainties akin to those Grann critiques in other contexts, yet Grann's fact-checking process at , involving multiple layers of verification, has consistently withstood scrutiny. No major factual disputes have undermined his core claims across works.

Broader impact on journalism and history

Grann's narrative nonfiction has elevated the standards for by demonstrating the viability of immersive, long-form reporting that integrates exhaustive , on-site expeditions, and rigorous into compelling . His approach, involving years-long pursuits in remote locations such as the Amazon or badlands, underscores the value of persistence in uncovering obscured truths, inspiring journalists to prioritize depth over expediency in an era of diminishing resources for such work. In historical scholarship, Grann's works have revived interest in marginalized or suppressed events, challenging dominant narratives shaped by victors or institutional biases. For instance, Killers of the Flower Moon (2017) exposed the systematic murders of members in the —driven by oil wealth and racial greed—as a foundational case in American serial killings and the FBI's origins, drawing on previously under-examined court records and oral histories to reveal a far broader than the convicted perpetrator, William Hale. This has prompted renewed academic and public scrutiny of early 20th-century racial injustices, with Osage descendants crediting the book for amplifying their long-ignored testimonies. Similarly, The Wager (2023) dissects 18th-century British naval shipwrecks and mutinies through conflicting survivor accounts, critiquing how official histories sanitize imperial brutality and mutiny to preserve national myths. By cross-referencing logs, diaries, and artifacts, Grann illustrates how primary sources can subvert sanitized chronicles, influencing contemporary historians to reassess maritime narratives of empire and survival. His method—treating history as detective work—has broadened public engagement with causal realism in past events, emphasizing empirical reconstruction over ideological overlays.

Awards and recognition

Literary prizes

Killers of the Flower Moon (2017), Grann's account of the Osage murders and the early FBI, earned a finalist position for the National Book Award for Nonfiction. The book subsequently received the Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime in 2018 from the Mystery Writers of America, recognizing excellence in crime and mystery nonfiction. It also won the Spur Award for Best Historical Nonfiction Book, presented by the Western Writers of America for outstanding Western-themed historical works. Grann's earlier book The Lost City of Z (2009), chronicling explorer Percy Fawcett's Amazon expeditions, was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize for , a leading British award for nonfiction writing. More recently, The Wager (2023), detailing an 18th-century British naval shipwreck and mutiny, was longlisted for the for (formerly the Samuel Johnson Prize), which honors exceptional nonfiction narratives. These recognitions highlight Grann's contributions to narrative nonfiction, particularly in historical and investigative genres, though he has not yet secured a top-tier win like the itself.

Journalistic honors

Grann's investigative journalism, particularly his long-form articles for , has garnered significant recognition from professional journalism organizations. In 2009, for his article "Trial by Fire," which exposed flaws in arson science leading to the 2004 execution of in , Grann received the Award for Magazine Reporting from . The same piece earned him the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Magazine Investigative Reporting from the . "Trial by Fire" also won a Silver Gavel Award from the in recognition of its contribution to public understanding of legal and justice system issues. Grann has received the Sigma Delta Chi Award a second time for excellence in , though specifics on the awarding piece are not detailed in available records. These honors underscore the impact of his reporting on forensic reliability and debates, with the article cited by U.S. Justice in a death penalty-related opinion.

References

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