
The New Yorker Radio Hour A Master Class with David Grann
11 snips
Sep 8, 2023 David Grann, staff writer for The New Yorker and author of best-selling nonfiction books, discusses his writing process and the challenges of factual storytelling. He shares insights on his latest book 'The Wager' and his upcoming film adaptations. Grann talks about his research journey, including a trip to Weijer Island, and reflects on the future of his writing career.
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Old Man and the Gun Launched His New Yorker Career
- David Grann's first New Yorker story was about an elderly serial bank robber nicknamed The Old Man and the Gun.
- The profile later became a film starring Robert Redford, marking Grann's early success with character-driven narratives.
Disappear Around Subjects To Hear True Voices
- Spend hours with subjects until they forget you're there to capture authentic, unvarnished voices.
- Grann prefers immersive observation over press-scraped interviews because it yields more revealing dialogue and behavior.
The Reporter Is An Excavator Not An Inventor
- Grann calls the reporter's role an excavator: you do not imagine stories, you unearth them from archives and obsessions.
- His revelation came repeatedly in projects where archives and subjects' failures revealed richer narratives than his initial pitches.

