About

James Gleick is an author and journalist who writes about science and technology and their cultural consequences. His last book was Time Travel. His next book, coming in October, is The Telephone: A New History.

He was born in New York City in 1954. He graduated from Harvard College in 1976 and helped found Metropolis, an alternative weekly newspaper in Minneapolis. Then he worked for ten years as an editor and reporter for The New York Times.

His first book, Chaos, was a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize finalist and a national bestseller. He collaborated with the photographer Eliot Porter on Nature’s Chaos and with developers at Autodesk on Chaos: The Software. In 2012 he published the best-selling The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood, winner of the Royal Society Winton Prize. His other books include the best-selling biographies, Genius: The Life and Science of Richard Feynman and Isaac Newton, both shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize, as well as Faster and What Just Happened. They have been translated into thirty languages.

He was an internet pioneer, founding the Pipeline, an early New York service provider, known for its graphical user interface in 1993. Beginning in 1995 he wrote the Fast Forward column in the New York Times Magazine.

He was the McGraw Distinguished Lecturer at Princeton University in 1989–90 and the first editor of the Best American Science Writing series. He served as president of the Authors Guild from 2017 to 2019. He contributes regularly to The New York Review.

He lives in New York and London.

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Published on January 23, 2026 06:59
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