Literary Journalism
Writing from observation, about people, places, and things in the present. A type of creative nonfiction.
This classic essay takes the form of the journalistic profile piece—usually used to write about “important” and “unusual” people—and turns it on its head, using it instead to delve into the life of someone utterly ordinary: a “typical” ten-year-old American boy.
Joseph Mitchell’s classic piece of literary journalism, published in 1940, paints a vivid portrait of a neighborhood saloon in New York’s Lower East Side.
E. B. White’s classic essay published in 1948, one of the most famous literary essays about New York City.
Joseph Mitchell’s famous 1942 profile of Joe Gould, the Greenwich Village eccentric who claimed to be writing a voluminous “Oral History of Our Time.”
Susan Orleans profiles a group of free-living teenage surfer girls in Hawaii.
Journalist Rick Bragg paints a vivid picture of the life of a small-town policemen in the rural South.
Journalist Rick Bragg writes an ode to sweet iced tea, the archetypal Southern drink.
Rivertown is Peter Hessler's memoir of living and teaching in rural Sichuan province as a Peace Corps volunteer in the 1990s. It is one of the most widely read accounts in the English-speaking world of living in China as a foreigner.