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May 19, 2013
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Ellen Goodman, Columnist
Ellen Goodman is an American original. Her abundant talents—intellect, wit, style, news judgment—set her apart with an élan uniquely her own. Her Pulitzer Prize winning commentary appears in more than 375 newspapers. One of those rare writers and thinkers who senses emerging shifts in our public and private lives, Goodman alters perceptions of confounding issues. “She takes current events and sees their universal truths,” says the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Goodman has been an innovative force in American journalism. She once said, “I think readers need to be less alienated from editorial pages” and made them so by expanding the debate on op-ed pages. She has commented on the tumult of social change and its impact on families, and shattered the mold of men writing exclusively about politics. Goodman brings new readers to editorial pages. She is widely acclaimed as a voice of sanity, and readers depend on her to help them make sense of their changing lives and relationships. “I have always read Ellen Goodman,” a Sarasota, Fla., reader says. “She writes on issues that concern me, no matter where I’ve lived or where I moved.” Goodman’s first job was at Newsweek as a researcher, at a time when only men became writers. She landed a job as a reporter for the Detroit Free Press in 1965 and, in 1967, for The Boston Globe where she began writing her column. A 1963 cum laude graduate of Radcliffe College, Goodman returned to Harvard in 1973-74 as a Nieman Fellow, where she studied the dynamics of social change. Her column was syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group in 1976. In 1980, Goodman was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Commentary. As the first Lorry I. Lokey Visiting Professor in Professional Journalism at Stanford University, she taught opinion writing for the winter semester in 1996. Goodman’s first book, “Turning Points” (Doubleday, 1979), detailed the effect of the changing roles of women on the family. Six collections of her columns have been published: “Paper Trail: Common Sense in Uncommon Times” (Simon & Schuster, 2004); “Close to Home” (Simon & Schuster, 1979); “At Large” (Summit Books, 1981); “Keeping in Touch” (Summit Books, 1985); “Making Sense” (Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989); and “Value Judgments” (Farrar Straus Giroux, 1993). She is also co-author with Patricia O’Brien of “I Know Just What You Mean: The Power of Friendship in Women’s Lives” (Simon & Schuster, 2000). Goodman’s work has won many other awards, including the American Society of Newspaper Editors Distinguished Writing Award in 1980. She received the Hubert H. Humphrey Civil Rights Award from the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights in 1988. In 1993, at its Seventh Annual Exceptional Merit Media Award Ceremony, The National Women’s Political Caucus gave her the President’s Award. In 1994, the Women’s Research & Education Institute presented her with their American Woman Award. Ellen Goodman lives in Brookline, Mass., with her husband. For further information, please call: Alan Shearer, Editorial Director, or James Hill, Managing Editor at 800/879-9794. Truthdig Columns201208/26 Throwing Some Humble Pies 01/22 Forget Roe, Try Griswold 201108/25 Equal Rites Awards 2011 03/29 This Friend Was a Fighter 01/02 No Time for ’Tirement’ 201008/27 The Equal Rites Awards—Again 200912/31 Letting Go 12/23 Women 12/16 Whatever Happened to Shame? 12/09 The ‘Human’ Factor Missing in Copenhagen 12/02 They Don’t Check Facts Like They Used To 11/25 Mammogram Backlash Is About Mistrust 11/18 Lipstick on a Rogue 11/11 Where Does the Caving End? 11/05 What Option for Afghan Women? 10/29 In Pursuit of Happiness 10/21 Don’t Worry About Us Seniors 10/07 The Gay Divorce Fandango 10/01 A Question of Health—and Equality 09/24 Now, Where Was I? 09/16 Clinging to Civility 09/09 Grateful to Have a Job, and Bone-Tired 09/03 Health Care’s Senior Moments 08/26 His Own Man 08/20 The Equal Rites Awards, 2009 08/05 In a Wing-Nut World, Granny’s Toast 07/23 Taking On ‘Big Food’ 07/15 Sotomayor Enters the D.C. Twilight Zone 07/08 Palin the Pretender 07/01 Getting Old in the Land of Independence 06/24 Journalism in the Twitter Era 06/17 Tuning a Culture to a ‘Calling’ 06/11 The Identity Dance 06/03 Myth of the Lone Shooter 05/28 A Wise Person for the Court 05/21 In Praise of Empathy 05/07 When Rationing May Be Rational 04/29 Life as a Makeover 04/23 Sexting—and Common Sense 04/16 A Strange Dual Citizenship 04/08 Taliban, the Sequel 04/02 Putting the ‘Care’ in Health Care 03/26 In the Garden of Eatin’ 03/19 The Geezer Gang Is Staying on the Job 03/11 Population Boom in the Freezer 03/05 The Man Who Won’t Change 02/18 High Ideals in Low Times 02/11 A Dubious Equality for Women 02/05 Eight Is (More Than) Enough 01/29 Obama’s Stuck Playing the Same Lame Game 01/22 Faith Amid the Ruins of Faith 01/14 A Huge Opportunity for the Mom in Chief 01/08 Work Hard, but Pray for Luck 01/01 Let’s Pledge to Stop Being Stupid About Teen Sex 200812/24 Don’t Be Fooled by Bush’s Farewell Tour 12/18 You Can Never Have Too Many Kennedys in the Senate 12/11 Say Hello to the Thrift Zeitgeist 12/04 Which Hillary Will We Get? 11/19 The New Longevity 11/13 From Barracuda to Scapegoat 11/06 America’s Relay Race 10/30 The Scariest Day of the Year 10/22 The Molecular Full Monty 10/16 Endangering Choice 10/08 What McCain and Obama Don’t Know 10/01 The Next President’s Supreme Legacy 09/24 Whatever Happened to Personal Responsibility? 09/17 Sisterhood of the Flummoxed Female Voters 09/10 Sarah Zamboni Clears the Ice 09/02 Privacy, Pregnancy and Double Standards 08/27 Hillary Made History Enough 08/21 The Equal Rites Awards of 2008 07/30 Equality, by the Numbers 07/23 Refighting the Vietnam War 07/16 The Do-It-Yourself Economy 07/09 Pregnant Man Puts the Trans in Gender 07/02 Home-Grown Politics 06/25 A Teachable Moment for Teen Pregnancy 06/18 The Hymen Controversy 06/11 Getting Even 05/28 What Obama Should Say to Women 05/21 A Pretty Picture of Diversity That Faded 05/14 Destroying a Village of Pedophilia 05/08 Obama’s Mama 04/30 Unequal Under the Law 04/24 How We Make Change 04/17 Family Ties 04/09 In Utero Inc. 04/02 The Mother-Daughter Divide 03/26 McCains Age Is No Joke 03/20 Too Big to Fail 03/13 The Wronged Political Wives Club 03/05 The Race Goes On 02/28 Shopping the Spiritual Mall 02/21 Why Obama Owes Women 02/14 You Are More Than What You Eat 02/06 So Much for Conventional Wisdom 01/31 Between a Veteran and a Visionary 01/23 On Being ‘Black Enough’ 01/16 The Dream Ticket Contact.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) Publications
I Know Just What You Mean: The Power of Friendship in Women’s LivesBy Ellen Goodman, Patricia O'Brien
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