Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1753 Jack Beatty

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1753

 

Jack Beatty was born and raised in Dorchester and attended Boston Latin School, Boston State College and the University of Massachusetts Boston.

Jack Beatty is public radio station WBUR’s On Point program news analyst. He was a longtime senior editor at The Atlantic Monthly, which he joined in September of 1983, having previously worked as a book reviewer at Newsweek and as the literary editor of The New Republic.

From The Atlantic Monthly:

Beatty joined The Atlantic Monthly as a senior editor in September of 1983, having previously worked as a book reviewer at Newsweek and as the literary editor of The New Republic. In addition to editing many of The Atlantic‘s major nonfiction pieces, Beatty is in charge of the book-review section, and he has contributed numerous articles to the magazine himself. Recent subjects have spanned the globe: NATO, the United States Navy, and the Irish Troubles among them.

His 1993 contribution to The Atlantic Monthly‘s Travel pages, “The Bounteous Berkshires,” earned these words of praise from The Washington Post: “The best travel writers make you want to travel with them. I, for instance, would like to travel somewhere with Jack Beatty, having read his superb account of a cultural journey to the Berkshire Hills of western Massachusetts.” Beatty is also the author of The World According to Peter Drucker, published in 1998 by The Free Press and called “a fine intellectual portrait” by Michael Lewis in the New York Times Book Review.

Born, raised, and educated in Boston, Beatty wrote a best-selling biography of James Michael Curley, the Massachusetts congressman and governor and Boston mayor, which Addison-Wesley published in 1992 to enthusiastic reviews. The Washington Post said, “The Rascal King is an exemplary political biography. It is thorough, balanced, reflective, and gracefully written.” The Chicago Sun-Times called it a “. . . beautifully written, richly detailed, vibrant biography.” The book was nominated for a National Book Critics’ Circle award.

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