In October 2020 he published a biography of Joe Biden, entitled Joe Biden: The Life, the Run, and What Matters Now.[5] In September 2021, he published Wildland: The Making of America's Fury, about profound cultural and political changes occurring between September 11, 2001, and January 6, 2021, as evidenced by the turmoil of 2020.
Early life and education
Osnos was born in London, when his parents, Susan (née Sherer) Osnos and Peter L.W. Osnos, were visiting from Moscow, where his father was assigned as a correspondent for The Washington Post.[6]
Osnos' father was a Jewish refugee from Poland born in India when his family was en route to the U.S.[7] His mother was the daughter of diplomat Albert W. Sherer Jr.[8]
Osnos joined The New Yorker in September 2008 and served as the magazine's China correspondent until 2013. Osnos has contributed to the NPR radio show This American Life and the PBS television show Frontline.[17][18] As The New Yorker's China correspondent, Evan maintained a regular blog called "Letter from China"[19] and wrote articles about China's young neoconservatives, the Fukushima nuclear meltdown, and the Wenzhou train crash. According to The Washington Post, "In the pages of the New Yorker, Evan Osnos has portrayed, explained and poked fun at this new China better than any other writer from the West or the East."[20] He received two awards from the Overseas Press Club and the Osborn Elliott Prize for excellence in journalism from the Asia Society.[21][22]
Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China (2014), Osnos' first book, follows the lives of individuals swept up in China's "radical transformation", Osnos said, in an interview on Fresh Air in June 2014.[2] He said Chinese Communist Party leaders abandoned "the scripture of socialism and they held on to the saints of socialism." In addition to the National Book Award, the book was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in nonfiction.[23] Osnos left China in 2013, to write about politics and foreign affairs at The New Yorker. Among other topics, he examined the politics behind a chemical leak in West Virginia[24] and twice profiled Vice President Joe Biden, which became the basis for a book.[25] According to Publishers Weekly, his book, Joe Biden constituted "a portrait of the candidate that's smart and evocative."[26]
Wildland: The Making of America's Fury (2021) follows three dissimilar communities in the US and demonstrates how their interconnections reveal "seismic changes in American politics and culture."[27] The book, a New York Times bestseller, focused on a period of political dissolution bounded by the terrorist attacks of 2001 and the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021.[28][29]
Personal life
Osnos is married to Sarabeth Berman, a graduate of Barnard College.[11] Since July 2013, they have lived in Washington, D.C., with their two children.[30] Osnos' Chinese name is 欧逸文 (Ōu Yìwén).[31] His father, Peter Osnos, is founder and editor-at-large of PublicAffairs, a publishing company.
— (2020). Joe Biden: The Life, the Run, and What Matters Now. New York: Scribner. p. 192. ISBN978-1982174026.
— (2021). Wildland: The Making of America's Fury. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 480. ISBN978-0374286675.
Articles
"Ruling-Class Rules: How to thrive in the power elite – while declaring it your enemy", The New Yorker, January 29, 2024, pp. 18–23. "In the nineteen-twenties... American elites, some of whom feared a Bolshevik revolution, consented to reform... Under Franklin D. Roosevelt... the U.S. raised taxes, took steps to protect unions, and established a minimum wage. The costs, [Peter] Turchin writes, 'were borne by the American ruling class.'... Between the nineteen-thirties and the nineteen-seventies, a period that scholars call the Great Compression, economic equality narrowed, except among Black Americans... But by the nineteen-eighties the Great Compression was over. As the rich grew richer than ever, they sought to turn their money into political power; spending on politics soared." (p. 22.) "[N]o democracy can function well if people are unwilling to lose power – if a generation of leaders... becomes so entrenched that it ages into gerontocracy; if one of two major parties denies the arithmetic of elections; if a cohort of the ruling class loses status that it once enjoyed and sets out to salvage it." (p. 23.)
Previously the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time from 1953–1963 and the Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting from 1964–1984