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Jess Walter
View on WikipediaJess Walter (born July 20, 1965[1]) is an American author of seven novels, two collections of short stories, and a non-fiction book. He is the recipient of the Edgar Allan Poe Award, and was a finalist for the National Book Award in 2006.
Key Information
Career
[edit]Walter has published seven novels, Over Tumbled Graves, Land of the Blind, Citizen Vince, The Zero, The Financial Lives of the Poets, Beautiful Ruins, and The Cold Millions. In 2013, he published his first collection of short stories, We Live in Water, which President Barack Obama named one of his favorite books in 2019.[2] In 2022, he published his second collection of short stories, The Angel of Rome. His essays and short stories have also appeared in Best American Short Stories, Best American Nonrequired Reading, McSweeny's, Esquire, Harper's, Byliner, Playboy, ESPN the Magazine, Details, and other publications.[3][independent source needed] His books have been published in thirty-two countries and translated into thirty-two languages.[4]
Walter's novel Beautiful Ruins was a number one New York Times best seller.[5] It was also named Esquire's Book of the Year, NPR Fresh Air's Best Novel of 2012, a New York Times Notable Book, and a Washington Post Notable Book.[6] Maureen Corrigan of NPR's Fresh Air called this novel a "literary miracle"[7] and Steve Almond of The Boston Globe described it as "a novel with pathos, piercing wit, and, most important, the generous soul of a literary classic".[8]
Walter's 2009 novel The Financial Lives of the Poets was named one of the best books of the year by Time, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, The Believer, NPR's Fresh Air, and several others.[9] Walter also writes screenplays, and has written the screenplay for a possible film adaptation of The Financial Lives of the Poets.
His 2006 novel The Zero was a finalist for the National Book Award. In a 2006 Washington Post book review, John McNally writes that with The Zero Walter has "written a new thriller not only with a conscience but also full of dead-on insights into our culture ... and the often surreal post-9/11 world."[10]
Citizen Vince, Walter's 2005 novel, earned him the Edgar Allan Poe Award for best novel in 2006.[11]
Walter is also a career journalist, whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Boston Globe. As a reporter he covered the Randy Weaver/Ruby Ridge case for the Spokane Spokesman-Review newspaper and authored a book about the case, Every Knee Shall Bow (revised edition titled Ruby Ridge).[12] He also was the co-author with Christopher Darden of the 1996 bestseller In Contempt.
Family
[edit]Walter lives with his wife, Anne, and their children, Brooklyn, Ava and Alec, in his childhood hometown of Spokane, Washington.[13][14] He is an alumnus of East Valley High School (Spokane, Washington) and Eastern Washington University.
Bibliography
[edit]Novels
[edit]- Over Tumbled Graves (2001)
- The Land of the Blind (2003)
- Citizen Vince (2005)
- The Zero (2006)
- The Financial Lives of the Poets (2009)
- Beautiful Ruins (2012)
- The Cold Millions (2020)
- So Far Gone (2025)
Short story collections
[edit]- We Live in Water: Stories (2013)
- The Angel of Rome: And Other Stories (2022)
Non-fiction
[edit]- Every Knee Shall Bow (1995)
- re-released as: Ruby Ridge: The Truth and Tragedy of the Randy Weaver Family (Updated & Revised ed.). New York: Harper Perennial. 2002 [1995]. ISBN 9-7800-6000-794-2.
- In Contempt (co-authored with Christopher Darden) (1996)
Awards
[edit]- 2006 : Edgar Allan Poe Award for best novel Citizen Vince
- 2006 : National Book Award Finalist for best novel The Zero
- 2006 : Finalist for Washington State Book Award in Fiction for The Zero
- 2007 : Finalist for Washington State Book Award in Fiction for Citizen Vince
- 2007 : Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award for The Zero
- 2007 : LA Times Book Prize for The Zero
- 2011 : Finalist for Washington State Book Award in Fiction for The Financial Lives of the Poets
- 2012 : New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2012 list for Beautiful Ruins
- 2021: Washington State Book Award for Fiction for The Cold Millions.
References
[edit]- ^ "The Financial Lives of the Poets". Barnes & Noble. Archived from the original on 2011-03-10.
- ^ "'It's really flattering': Obama picks Spokane's Jess Walter for favorite books of the year list | The Spokesman-Review". www.spokesman.com. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ "Biography". www.jesswalter.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-06. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
- ^ "Jess Walter on The Cold Millions, and How He Shapes a Story | Authorlink". Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ Atkins, Lucy (2013-05-26). "Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter". The Times. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
- ^ "Jess Walter". Jess Walter. 2012-06-18. Archived from the original on 2021-10-14. Retrieved 2022-01-01.
- ^ Corrigan, Maureen (June 18, 2012). "'Beautiful Ruins,' Both Human and Architectural". NPR. Archived from the original on May 17, 2017. Retrieved April 3, 2018.
- ^ Almond, Steve (June 10, 2012). "'Beautiful Ruins' by Jess Walter". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on January 21, 2021. Retrieved June 21, 2017.
- ^ Walter, Jess (7 September 2010). The Financial Lives of the Poets. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0061916052.
- ^ McNally, John (September 10, 2006). "The Man Who Knew Too Little". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2013-10-28.
- ^ "The Edgar Awards". Theedgars.com. 2021-04-29. Archived from the original on 2021-11-27. Retrieved 2022-01-01.
- ^ Jess Walter, Every Knee Shall Bow, HarperCollins ReganBooks, 1995, ISBN 0-06-000794-X.
- ^ "Fun facts about award-winning Spokane author Jess Walter". Spokesman.com. 2020-10-23. Retrieved 2025-05-06.
- ^ "Spokane author Jess Walter on writing short stories, his working-class roots and his hometown". The Seattle Times. 2022-06-21. Retrieved 2025-05-06.
External links
[edit]- Official Jess Walter website
- Fantastic Fiction - Jess Walter
- The Bat Segundo Show (radio interviews): 2007 (40 minutes) and 2012 (50 minutes)
Jess Walter
View on GrokipediaJess Walter (born July 20, 1965) is an American author of novels, short stories, and nonfiction, based in his hometown of Spokane, Washington.[1][2] Beginning his career as a reporter for The Spokesman-Review in 1987, he contributed to coverage of the Ruby Ridge standoff that earned a team Pulitzer Prize finalist nomination in 1992, later authoring the nonfiction book Every Knee Shall Bow (1995) on the incident.[2] Walter has published eight novels—including the #1 New York Times bestseller Beautiful Ruins (2012), The Cold Millions (2020), and The Zero (2006), a National Book Award finalist—as well as two short story collections such as We Live in Water (2013), with his works translated into 34 languages.[2][3] His achievements include the Edgar Allan Poe Award for best novel (Citizen Vince, 2005), two Pacific Northwest Booksellers Awards, and the Washington State Book Award for The Cold Millions.[2]
Early Life and Education
Childhood and Family Origins
Jess Walter was born in 1965 in Spokane, Washington, a city in the Inland Northwest known for its working-class roots and proximity to rural landscapes.[4] His family background reflected the migratory and labor-oriented ethos of mid-20th-century American migrants to the region; his paternal grandfather, also named Jess Walter, arrived in Spokane as a young man by hopping a freight train from the Dakotas, embodying the hobo traditions of transient workers during the Dust Bowl era.[5] Walter's father worked in heavy industry, employed at Kaiser Aluminum as a union leader, which immersed the family in the culture of organized labor and workers' rights struggles prevalent in Spokane's industrial sector.[6] [5] On his mother's side, Walter's grandfather Ralph endured childhood homelessness alongside his mother and sister before finding employment as a laborer in agriculture and road construction crews, highlighting patterns of economic precarity in extended family histories.[7] These origins fostered an environment steeped in tales of resilience amid hardship, with Walter later describing his upbringing as influenced by generational narratives of migration, union activism, and manual toil in the Pacific Northwest.[8] A formative incident occurred at age five, when Walter, playing in an empty urban lot with a friend, suffered an accident that blinded him in his left eye, an event he has reflected on as shaping his perspective on vulnerability and adaptation.[4] This Spokane-centric childhood, marked by blue-collar familial ties, laid the groundwork for Walter's recurring literary themes of American underclass struggles and regional identity.[9]Academic Background
Jess Walter attended East Valley High School in Spokane, Washington.[6] He subsequently enrolled at Eastern Washington University in Spokane, where he majored in journalism and minored in creative writing and English.[10] Walter began working as a reporter for The Spokesman-Review prior to completing his undergraduate studies but graduated from the university in the early 1990s.[11][6] No record exists of Walter pursuing postgraduate degrees, though he later taught graduate-level creative writing workshops at Eastern Washington University and other institutions.[2]Journalism Career
Initial Reporting Roles
Walter began his professional journalism career in 1987 as a reporter for The Spokesman-Review, the daily newspaper in his hometown of Spokane, Washington.[2] In this initial role, he focused on local crime reporting and general news coverage in the Inland Northwest, honing skills in investigative and beat reporting amid the demands of daily deadlines.[12] His work at the paper, which he joined after completing studies at Eastern Washington University, involved producing detailed accounts of regional incidents, reflecting a commitment to factual on-the-ground journalism in a mid-sized market.[11] Prior to formal reporting duties, Walter had entered the newsroom environment at The Spokesman-Review during his late teens, handling entry-level tasks such as answering phones and drafting obituaries while balancing college and early fatherhood, which provided foundational exposure to the operations of a metropolitan daily.[13] This progression from support roles to full-time reporting underscored his rapid adaptation to professional standards, setting the stage for more prominent assignments without prior stints at other outlets.[6]Ruby Ridge Investigation and Book
In August 1992, Jess Walter, then a reporter for the Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Washington, participated in the newspaper's coverage of the Ruby Ridge standoff, an 11-day siege at Randy Weaver's remote cabin in Boundary County, Idaho, that resulted in the deaths of Weaver's 14-year-old son Sammy, his wife Vicki (who was holding their infant daughter), and U.S. Marshal William Degan.[14] Working with veteran reporter Bill Morlin, who handled on-site reporting including aerial observations from the roadblock, Walter conducted phone-based investigations into the Weaver family's background, tracing their roots to Iowa and uncovering details of Randy Weaver's involvement with white separatist groups.[14] Their joint efforts yielded key post-standoff interviews with Weaver's surviving daughters, Sara and Rachel, providing the first public insider accounts from the cabin and reframing the incident from a straightforward firefight to a sequence marked by a teenager's fatal shooting in the back and the killing of an unarmed woman.[14] Walter's reporting navigated significant obstacles, including a fast-evolving story amid limited 1990s technology (such as TRS-80 computers), tensions with protesters espousing conspiracy theories, and the need to verify information against official narratives from federal agencies like the ATF and FBI.[14] This groundwork exposed early inconsistencies, such as the ATF's undercover tactics to sell illegal sawed-off shotguns to Weaver and potential entrapment in his failure to appear for court, themes that persisted through the 1993 trial where Weaver was acquitted of most charges but convicted on lesser counts.[14] Building on this coverage and the subsequent 1995 federal trials, Walter produced Every Knee Shall Bow: The Truth and Tragedy of Ruby Ridge and the Randy Weaver Family, a non-fiction account published in 1995 by HarperCollins.[15] The 412-page book synthesizes hundreds of official documents, trial transcripts, and interviews with Weavers, law enforcement personnel, and informants to chronicle the family's fundamentalist Christian upbringing, Weaver's drift into Aryan Nations circles, the initial ATF sting operation in 1989, the August 21 confrontation triggered by marshal surveillance, the FBI's deployment of modified rules of engagement authorizing deadly force on armed adults, and the Justice Department's internal review revealing sniper errors and procedural violations.[15][14] Reissued in 2002 as Ruby Ridge: The Truth and Tragedy of the Randy Weaver Family with updated material, the work predated the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the incident and offered a pre-Oklahoma City bombing lens on domestic extremism and government accountability.[15] Critics commended its balance, with the New York Times Book Review describing it as "a stunning job of reporting" for integrating contradictory elements without sensationalism.[15][16] The Washington Times praised it as "the most comprehensive, even-handed and best-written account of Ruby Ridge," noting Walter's fluency in dissecting causal chains from minor infractions to tragedy.[15] Such assessments highlight the book's reliance on primary evidence over narrative bias, though it has drawn criticism from some Weaver sympathizers for not fully endorsing entrapment claims lacking conclusive proof in court records.[15]Literary Career
Shift to Fiction Writing
Walter transitioned from journalism and non-fiction to fiction writing after departing his full-time reporting role at The Spokesman-Review following the 1995 publication of his debut book, Every Knee Shall Bow: The Truth and Tragedy of Ruby Ridge.[17] This move freed him to pursue longer-form narratives, building on the investigative rigor and storytelling techniques developed during nearly a decade covering crime, federal standoffs, and regional issues in Spokane, Washington.[2] [18] His first novel, Over Tumbled Graves, appeared in 2001 from Harper Perennial.[19] The work, a crime thriller centered on a serial killer preying on vulnerable women near the Spokane River, incorporated procedural details from Walter's journalistic exposure to actual homicide investigations and local law enforcement challenges.[18] [20] Set against the backdrop of Spokane's socioeconomic undercurrents, it reflected his intimate knowledge of the area's social fabric without relying on direct reportage, signaling a deliberate pivot to imaginative yet grounded literary fiction.[21] This shift was influenced by Walter's longstanding ambition to novelize, which predated his journalistic entry point but gained momentum post-non-fiction, enabling him to blend empirical observation with fictional invention in subsequent works.[22] His journalism background provided a foundation in vivid scene-setting and character-driven realism, distinguishing his early novels from pure invention while avoiding the constraints of factual constraints.[18]Key Novels and Breakthroughs
Citizen Vince (2005) marked Walter's literary breakthrough, earning the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel in 2006 from the Mystery Writers of America.[23][24] The novel, blending crime fiction with themes of redemption and American identity, established Walter's reputation beyond journalism.[25] The Zero (2006) further elevated his profile as a finalist for the National Book Award in Fiction, alongside nominations for the PEN/USA Award and Los Angeles Times Book Prize.[26][27] This satirical novel, centered on the post-9/11 era and a detective's fractured reality, demonstrated Walter's shift toward broader literary ambition, winning the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award.[2] The Financial Lives of the Poets (2009) received acclaim as Time magazine's #2 novel of the year, showcasing Walter's exploration of economic desperation through a former journalist turned poet and petty criminal.[2] Beautiful Ruins (2012) achieved commercial breakthrough as a #1 New York Times bestseller for 69 weeks, named Esquire's Book of the Year and NPR's Fresh Air Novel of the Year.[28][2] The novel's interwoven narratives spanning Italy and Hollywood underscored Walter's versatility in historical and contemporary fiction.[29]Recent Works and Evolution
Walter's novel The Cold Millions, published on October 27, 2020, by HarperCollins, draws on historical events in early 20th-century Spokane, Washington, depicting labor struggles and free-speech fights through the experiences of teenage brothers inspired by real figures like Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. The book marked a departure toward expansive historical fiction, blending adventure with social critique, and earned praise for its Steinbeck-like portrayal of working-class resilience amid injustice.[30] In 2022, Walter released The Angel of Rome, a short story collection from Knopf, featuring interconnected narratives exploring themes of love, time, and human connection across varied settings from Italy to the American Midwest. The volume showcased his versatility in shorter forms, emphasizing character-driven introspection over plot-driven suspense, and reflected an intentional pivot toward injecting hope into literary narratives without compromising stylistic rigor.[31] His most recent novel, So Far Gone, issued by Harper on June 10, 2025, follows a reclusive former journalist and environmentalist thrust into a suspenseful cross-country quest to rescue kidnapped grandchildren amid familial and political fractures.[32] Reviewers noted its madcap road-trip structure, infused with humor and timely commentary on contemporary divisions, as a synthesis of Walter's satirical roots with matured thematic depth.[33][34] Over the past decade, Walter's oeuvre has evolved from the arch, post-9/11 thrillers and Hollywood satires of his earlier fiction—such as The Zero (2006)—toward broader historical canvases and seriocomic explorations of societal fault lines, informed by his journalistic background yet increasingly focused on redemptive human agency.[30] This progression, as Walter has described in interviews, stems from an autodidactic refinement of craft, prioritizing multifaceted perspectives and hope amid realism, without formal MFA training.[17] His recent output demonstrates a honed balance of binge-writing habits with deliberate structural innovation, adapting binge-like intensity to produce works that critique modern absurdities while affirming interpersonal bonds.[35]Bibliography
Novels
- Over Tumbled Graves (2001), a mystery novel set in Spokane exploring methamphetamine's impact on the community.
- Land of the Blind (2003), the second installment featuring detective Caroline Mabry investigating corruption in Spokane.
- Citizen Vince (2005), a noir novel about a small-time criminal in witness protection during the 1980 presidential election; winner of the 2005 Edgar Award for Best Novel.
- The Zero (2006), a satirical novel on post-9/11 America following a NYPD officer; National Book Award finalist.[26]
- The Financial Lives of the Poets (2009), a comic novel about a journalist turned poet attempting to save his home amid the 2008 financial crisis.
- Beautiful Ruins (2012), a bestselling novel spanning decades and continents, intertwining stories of love and Hollywood; #1 New York Times bestseller.
- The Cold Millions (2020), a historical novel based on the true story of the 1910s labor movement in Spokane; national bestseller and winner of the 2021 Washington State Book Award.
- So Far Gone (2025), his most recent novel exploring family and loss in contemporary America.[36][32]