Ira Berkow


Ira Berkow is an American sports reporter, columnist, and writer. He shared the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, which was awarded to the staff of The New York Times for their series .

Life

Berkow earned his BA in English Literature at Miami University, and his MA from the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University.
He was a reporter for the Minneapolis Tribune, a syndicated features writer, sports and general columnist, and sports editor for the Newspaper Enterprise Association.
From 1981 to 2007 he was a sports reporter and columnist for The New York Times and has written for Esquire, The New York Times Magazine, Art News, Seventeen, Chicago Magazine, The Chicago Tribune Magazine, National Strategic Forum Review, Reader's Digest, and Sports Illustrated, among others.
He shared the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for his article "The Minority Quarterback" in The New York Times series How Race Is Lived in America. His work has been reprinted or cited over six decades in the annual anthologies Best Sports Stories and its successor Best American Sports Writing, and a column of his was included in Best American Sports Writing of the Century. The novelist Scott Turow wrote, "Ira Berkow is one of the great American writers, without limitation to the field of sports."
He was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 1988, "For thoughtful commentary on the sports scene."
In 2006, he was inducted into the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. He holds an honorary doctorate degree from Roosevelt University, 2009.
Berkow is the author of 26 books including the Edgar Allan Poe Award nominated non-fiction The Man Who Robbed The Pierre: The Story of Bobby Comfort and the Biggest Hotel Robbery Ever.

Works

Books

  • To the Hoop The Seasons of a Basketball Life, Sports Publishing, 2025, ; Basic Books, 1997.
  • Baseball's Best Ever: A Half Century of Covering Hall of Famers, Sports Publishing, 2022.
  • How Life Imitates Sports: A Sportswriter Recounts, Relives, and Reckons with 50 Years on the Sports Beat, Sports Publishing, 2022,.
  • , Triumph Books, 2017,
  • , Triumph Books, 2015,
  • , Triumph Books, 2014,
  • Wrigley Feld: An Oral and Narrative History of the Home of the Chicago Cubs, Stewart, Tabori and Chang, 2014.
  • , Triumph Books, 2013,
  • , Triumph Books, 2013,
  • , Triumph Books, 2009,
  • , Triumph Books, 2009,
  • Full Swing; Hits, Runs and Errors in a Writer's Life, Ivan R. Dee Publisher, 2007,
  • , University of Nebraska Press, 2007,
  • Full Swing: Hits, Runs and Errors in a Writer's Life, Ivan R. Dee, 2006.
  • , University of Nebraska Press, 2004,
  • The Minority Quarterback & Other Lives In Sports, I.R. Dee, 2002,
  • The Gospel According to Casey,, St. Martin's Press, 1992,
  • Hank Greenberg: Hall-of-Fame Slugger, juvenile, The Jewish Publication Society, 1991
  • How to Talk Jewish, by Jackie Mason, St. Martin's Press, 1990
  • Hank Greenberg: The Story of My Life, Times Books, 1989, editor
  • Pitchers do Get Lonely, and Other Sports Stories, Atheneum, 1988
  • Carew, by Rod Carew, Simon and Schuster, 1979.
  • The DuSable Panthers: The Greatest, Blackest, Saddest Team from the Meanest Street in Chicago, 1978
  • Maxwell Street, Survival in a Bazaar. Doubleday & Co., 1977,.
  • Beyond the Dream: Occasional Heroes of Sports,, Atheneum,1975
  • Rockin' Steady: A Guide to Basketball and Cool, by Walt "Clyde" Frazier, 1974
  • Oscar Robertson: The Golden Year 1964, Prentice-Hall, 1971

Film