Fox Butterfield | |
---|---|
Born | Lancaster, Pennsylvania | July 8, 1939
Occupation | Journalist, author |
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Genre | Journalism, non-fiction |
Fox Butterfield (born 8 July 1939)[1] is an American journalist who spent much of his 30-year career[2] reporting for The New York Times.
Butterfield served as Times bureau chief in Saigon, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Beijing, and Boston and as a correspondent in Washington and New York City. During that time, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize as a member of The New York Times team that published the Pentagon Papers, the Pentagon's secret history of the Vietnam War, in 1971 and won a 1983 National Book Award for Nonfiction for China: Alive in the Bitter Sea, an account of his experience as the first Times reporter allowed in China after the revolution.[3][a] He also wrote All God's Children: The Bosket Family and the American Tradition of Violence (1995)[4] about the child criminal Willie Bosket.
In 1990, Butterfield wrote an article on the first African-American to be elected president of the Harvard Law Review, future president of the United States Barack Obama.[5]
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