John Berendt | |
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Born | Syracuse, New York, US | 5 December 1939
Occupation | Author |
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Period | 1961–present |
Genre |
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John Berendt (born December 5, 1939) is an American author, known for writing the best-selling non-fiction book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, which was a finalist for the 1995 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction.
Berendt grew up in Syracuse, New York, where both of his parents were writers.[1] As an English major at Harvard University, he worked on the staff of the Harvard Lampoon. He graduated in 1961 and moved to New York City to pursue a journalism career.[2]
Berendt was an associate editor of Esquire from 1961 to 1969, editor of New York magazine from 1977 to 1979, and a columnist for Esquire from 1982 to 1994.[2] Despite interviewing Jim Williams, the central character in Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, in 1982, it was not until 1985 that Berendt moved to Savannah, Georgia,[3][4] to begin researching a new book, which was seven years in the making.[5] (The killing of Danny Hansford, which is the book's central story, happened the year preceding Berendt's first visit, while Williams had been convicted of murder for a second time at the point of his return.)[6] His initial plan was to spend three weeks at a time in Savannah, then return to New York City to write, but he changed his mind. "Things would happen if i was simply there," he said in 1997. "It made sense to stay, so I got a full-time apartment in Savannah." He lived, briefly, in a carriage house on East Charlton Lane,[5][7] behind 22 East Jones Street.[8]
External videos | |
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Booknotes interview with Berendt on Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, August 28, 1997, C-SPAN |
He published Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil in 1994, and it became an overnight success. The book spent a record-breaking 216 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list[9] — still, to this day, the longest-standing best seller of the Times.
The story, unsettling and real, broke down the idea of the quintessential phenomenon of a true American city—only to reveal its quirks: its man walking an invisible dog; its voice of the drag queen; a high-society man in its elite community—all that somehow, unravels a murder mystery. Virtually seeming like a novel and reading like a tale, the non-fictional story is about the real-life events surrounding the murder trial of Jim Williams.[10] Berendt acknowledged that he fabricated some scenes and changed the sequence of some events.[11] The book was adapted into a 1997 film directed by Clint Eastwood. John Cusack plays John Kelso, a character loosely based on Berendt.
Berendt's second book, The City of Falling Angels, was published in September 2005.[12] It chronicles interwoven lives in Venice in the aftermath of the fire that destroyed the La Fenice opera house. According to Kirkus Reviews, "Berendt does great justice to an exalted city that has rightly fascinated the likes of Henry James, Robert Browning, and many filmmakers throughout the world."[13]
In 2024, aged 84, he returned to Savannah, for his first speaking engagement in sixteen years, to sign copies of a 30th-anniversary edition of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.[14]