Calvin Trillin

Calvin Trillin

Author / Journalist

Calvin Trillin is a journalist, humorist and novelist. Best known for his humorous writing about food and eating, he is also the author of several books of fiction, nonfiction essays, comic verse and plenty of more serious journalism.

Trillin was born in Kansas City, Missouri in 1935. He received his BA from Yale University, where he was chair of the Yale Daily News, in 1957. In 1963, after a serving in the U.S. Army and then working at Time magazine for a short time, Trillin joined the staff of The New Yorker magazine, where his reporting on racial integration at the University of Georgia eventually developed into his first book, An Education in Georgia: Charlayne Hunter, Hamilton Holmes and the Integration of the University of Georgia. Trillin's 1967-1982 column "U.S. Journal" for The New Yorker documented events throughout the nation, both funny and serious; since 1984, he has written a series of longer, narrative pieces under the title "American Chronicles."

Trillin is also a longtime contributor to The Nation magazine - is, in fact, the single most prolific contributor to that magazine to date. From 1978-1980 he penned a column called "Variation"; from 1984-1990 another called "Uncivil Liberties"; and from 1990 to the present a weekly one called "Deadline Poem" consisting of humorous poems about current events.

Calvin Trillin's most recent novel is Deciding the Next Decider: The 2008 Presidential Race in Rhyme (Nov. 2008)

1mins
Journalist Calvin Trillin says we shouldn’t be too impressed with the 26 year old who recently became the New Yorker’s managing editor.
4mins
Journalism only became respectable a few decades ago. Thirty years back, Ivy Leaguers would never dream of entering the field.
23mins
A conversation with the author and journalist.
1mins
Calvin Trillin describes his irrational fear of the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles.
5mins
Author and journalist Calvin Trillin relies on a noteless predraft when he composes his articles, which he deems the “vomit out.”
2mins
Calvin Trillin is always puzzled by financial decisions about writing.
1mins
Calvin Trillin’s most memorable journalism moment was his ride on the first Freedom Ride bus into Jackson, Mississippi.
9mins
Calvin Trillin fondly remembers how print journalism overcame its last big opponent, television, and wonders if it will be able to deal with the Internet in the same way.
3mins
Reporters tend to be more interested in process, Trillin says.
The money would go to Bill Gates’s foundation, Trillin says.
5mins
Why do journalists keep telling us who’s going to win or lose? Is that really the point?
1mins
Why is somebody’s healthcare tied to his job on an assembly line?
2mins
Religion has been polarizing us for time immemorial.
2mins
We still haven’t figured out what to do with ourselves in the wake of the Cold War.
4mins
At some point most writers realize they sound the way they’re supposed to sound, Trillin says.
3mins
The New Yorker’s Joseph Mitchell has always been an inspiration of craft; Peter De Vries has been an inspiration for humor.
2mins
Reporters who think that they’re actually affecting things are following the path to madness or pomposity.
3mins
Although a writer never gets it quite perfect, the joy of laughter and discovery is enough to make a living.
1mins
Trying to figure out what goes first and what goes second.