Barry Yeoman
Journalist
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"He's taught big-city reporters a thing or two about investigative journalism."
–Atlanta Journal and Constitution

Barry Yeoman specializes in in-depth reporting that puts a human face on complex issues. In recent years he has brought readers into:
  • a South Carolina seminary where Christian missionaries learn to convert Muslims;
  • a lab where the fundamental assumptions of dinosaur science are being challenged;
  • a courtroom considering the case of a teenager who killed himself while taking the antidepressant Zoloft;
  • a training ground for private soldiers on secret missions;
  • the FEMA trailers and nursing homes where displaced New Orleanians lived after Hurricane Katrina; and
  • the Washington corridors where lobbyist Jack Abramoff rose to power before his recent fall.

He has written about Southern chicken farmers, brain-injured athletes, earnest Promise Keepers, an American strategist for the Iraqi resistance, controversial sex researchers, Spanish Carnival musicians, Jews for Jesus, and the women whose lives are caught up in the debate over "partial birth" abortion.

Barry's work has appeared in O, The Oprah Magazine; Discover; The New York Times; AARP The Magazine; Mother Jones; Audubon; Rolling Stone; Reader's Digest; Psychology Today; Glamour; salon.com; The Boston Globe; Ladies' Home Journal and many other publications. It has been translated into Russian, Portuguese, Spanish and Italian and reprinted around the world, from Great Britain to Japan. It has won him a slew of accolades. Columbia Journalism Review, the nation's premiere journalism magazine, named Barry one of nine investigative reporters who are "out of the spotlight but on the mark." The Columbia University School of Journalism and Poynter Institute have described Barry's work as "the essence of excellence." Project Censored has honored him four times for writing about undercovered issues.

He is currently a contributing editor for AARP The Magazine (the highest-circulation magazine in the United States) and a contributing writer for Mother Jones.
 
A 1982 graduate of New York University, Barry began his journalism career in Lafayette, Louisiana, where he developed his taste for Tabasco while writing about Cajun culture and politics for the Times of Acadiana. He also wrote the first newspaper article about Catholic-priest sexual abuse, according to a new book by law professor Timothy Lytton.

In 1986, Barry moved to his current hometown of Durham, North Carolina, to write for The Independent, an award-winning newsweekly praised for its "spine of steel" and its relentless commitment to investigative journalism. There, Barry wrote about the area's worst landlords (including Senator Jesse Helms), the politics of highway construction, and the region's growing Hispanic immigrant community. He also covered state government with a candor unprecedented in the state's press corps. (Immediately after Barry named Gov. Jim Martin "the official state vegetable," the governor announced at a press conference that he was not, in fact, a vegetable.) Barry's exposé of the poultry industry won him the National Magazine Award for Public Interest, and his "Highway Robbery" series received the Green Eyeshade Award, the South's preeminent journalism prize, and Northwestern University's John Bartlow Martin Award. In 1998 he was awarded the Batten Medal for journalism that demonstrates extraordinary humanity.

He has recently made some forays into documentary radio, too. His 2008 documentary "Picking Up the Pieces," which he reported, narrated, and co-produced for Prime Time Radio, was honored by American Women in Radio & Television with a 2009 Gracie.
 
Barry's work has been reprinted in several books, including The Best American Science Writing 2007; Wanderlust: Real Life Tales of Adventure and Romance; Merchants of Misery: How Corporate America Profits from Poverty; The Best Business Stories of the Year; and The World's Best Sex Writing 2005. For book ordering information, click here.
 
In addition to his writing, Barry has taught undergraduate journalism at Duke University's Sanford Institute of Public Policy. During the summer, he teaches at Duke Young Writers' Camp in Durham.

Click here for Barry's resume.

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