Jim Fusilli
Jim Fusilli is is an American journalist, essayist and novelist. He served as the rock-and-pop critic for The Wall Street Journal from 2009 to 2018, and contributed to NPR’s All Things Considered. He has written nine novels and is also the author of the Pet Sounds entry in Bloomsbury Publishing’s 33 1/3 series. Fusilli is host and executive producer of the podcast Writers at Work.
Early life and education
Vincent James Fusilli Jr. was born in Hoboken, New Jersey. He majored in English at St. Peter’s College where he was a critic for the student newspaper, the Pauw Wow. While in college, Fusilli joined the Teamsters Local 560 as a clerk at Smith Transport, headquartered in Hoboken.Writing career
Journalism
After graduation in 1975, he served as an intern at The Jersey Journal, where he wrote a weekly column on popular music. He also contributed articles to The Record.In 1982, Fusilli was hired by Dow Jones & Company, in its Corporate Relations department with responsibility for employee communications. Shortly thereafter, he began to contribute to the Journal’s new Leisure and Arts page, whose editor was Raymond Sokolov. His essay "A Wall Street Rocker" was published in The New York Times Magazine in 1986.
While continuing his occasional contributions to the Journal, Fusilli left Dow Jones and joined Sanofi, Inc., the U.S. holding company for the Paris-based Sanofi S.A.. During his 12 years with the company, Fusilli became vice president, Corporate Communications, a position in which he frequently traveled to Paris, accompanied the chairman and CEO Jean-François Dehecq, and worked with Oscar de la Renta, Yves Saint Laurent and other fashion luminaries whose fragrances were marketed by Sanofi. He left the company in 2001.
In 2009, Fusilli was appointed The Wall Street Journal’s rock-and-pop critic, the first in its history, and wrote a weekly column for its Arts section until 2018.
Novels
The first in a mystery series featuring the private detective Terry Orr and his daughter Bella, Closing Time was published by Penguin Putnam on September 10, 2001. Set in New York's Tribeca district, it was the last novel set in the city prior to the September 11 terrorist attacks. Subsequently, the sequel, A Well-Known Secret, was the first novel set in New York following the attacks; it addresses the impact on the city, the Tribeca neighborhood and the psyche of the reoccurring characters. Two more novels in the series came thereafter: Tribeca Blues, published in 2003, and Hard, Hard City, published in 2004. Hard, Hard City was named the Novel of the Year by Mystery Ink Magazine. The first three books in the series were subsequently reissued by Open Road Integrated Media.Fusilli's novels The Road to Nowhere and Billboard Man were published by Amazon Publishing’s Thomas & Mercer imprint.
In January 2024, his novel The Price You Pay, informed in large part by his experiences as a young Teamster, was published by Down & Out Books.
In April, 2024, A Song for Katy Shayne will be published by Level Best Books.