قراءة لمدة 1 دقيقة David Haldane

David Haldane

David Haldane (born January 18, 1949) is an American writer, journalist, columnist, and radio broadcaster.
He is known for books and essays, about his life in the American counterculture of the 1960s.
He also wrote about being an expatriate living in the Philippines.
The broad theme of Haldane’s later work is finding a place to call home, both physically and spiritually.
A former Los Angeles Times staff writer with a writing career spanning five decades, Haldane is currently a columnist for "The Manila Times", the Philippines' oldest national newspaper.

Haldane was born in Long Beach, California.
He holds a BA in Creative Writing from Goddard College, Plainfield, Vermont.

Career.

Haldane started as an underground reporter for the countercultural Berkeley BARB in the 1970s.
After working at the San Gabriel Valley Tribune and Riverside Press Enterprise, he joined the Los Angeles Times in 1985.
He worked there for years as a staff writer.
He wrote about many subjects and helped with two Pulitzer Prize-winning stories.
These were stories about the LA riots in 1993 and the California wildfires in 2004.
Haldane is also a former reporter and weekend news anchor at Z107.
7 FM radio in Joshua Tree, California.

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