Julian Guthrie is an American journalist and author based in San Francisco, California, USA.
Julian Guthrie | |
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Nationality | American |
Occupation | Journalist |
Notable work |
Guthrie started her journalism career at the San Francisco Examiner, and after its merger, continued at the San Francisco Chronicle.[1] She published her first book, The Grace of Everyday Saints, in 2011, about a church's closure order. It was based on work she had done as metro reporter covering the church's drama in 2005.[2] In 2013, she published her second book, The Billionaire and the Mechanic,[3] which was updated to include the Oracle Team second win at the America's Cup in its 2014 second edition.[1] Its second edition landed on the New York Times bestsellers list.[4] In 2014, her third book was preemptively sold to Penguin Books. That book was originally entitled "Beyond: Peter Diamandis and the Adventure of Space",[5] before becoming How to Make a Spaceship. In 2016, her third book, How to Make a Spaceship, was published. This book enticed several offers to acquire the film rights.[6] It landed on the New York Times bestsellers list,[7] and became a finalist in the 2017 PEN/Wilson Literary Science Writing Award,[8] and won the 2016 Emme Astronautical Literature Award.[9] Her fourth book, Alpha Girls, bought up by Currency Books in 2017 for 2019 publication, incited a bidding war in 2017 for its film and TV rights, ending up at Welle Entertainment.[10]
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