CHARLES
C. MANN’s most recent book is 1491 (Knopf), a history of
the Americas before Columbus, won the National Academy of Sciences' Keck award for the best book of the year. A Correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly,
Science, and Wired, he has covered the intersection
of science, technology, and commerce for many newspapers and magazines
here and abroad, including BioScience, Fortune, Geo (Germany), The New York Times (magazine, op-ed,
book review), Panorama (Italy), Paris-Match (France),
Quark (Japan), Smithsonian, Der Stern (Germany),
Technology Review, and The Washington Post (magazine, op-ed,
book review). In addition to 1491, he has co-written four other
books: The Second Creation: Makers of the Revolution in 20th-Century
Physics (1986; rev. ed., 1995); The Aspirin Wars: Money, Medicine,
and 100 Years of Rampant Competition (1991), Noah’s Choice:
The Future of Endangered Species (1995), and @ Large: The Strange
Case of the Internet’s Biggest Invasion (1998). He has also
written for CD-ROMs, HBO, and the television show Law and Order,
and was the text editorial coordinator for the internationally best-selling
photographic projects Material World (1994), Women in the
Material World (1996), and Hungry Planet (2005). A three-time
National Magazine Award finalist, he has received writing awards from
the American Bar Association, the American Institute of Physics, the Alfred
P. Sloan Foundation, the Margaret Sanger Foundation and the Lannan Foundation (a 2006 Literary Fellowship). He is now working on a companion volume to 1491; an early excerpt appeared in National Geographic in May 2007. |