Amy Wilentz is the author of
Farewell Fred Voodoo: A Letter from Haiti (2013),
The Rainy Season: Haiti since Duvalier (1990),
Martyrs' Crossing (2000), and
I Feel Earthquakes More Often Than They Happen: Coming to California in the Age of Schwarzenegger (2006). She is the winner of the Whiting Writers Award, the PEN Martha Albrand Non-Fiction Award, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters Rosenthal Award. In 1990, she was shortlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award for nonfiction for
The Rainy Season. She won the 2013 National Book Critics Circle Award for memoir for
Farewell, Fred Voodoo, and was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in general nonfiction in 2020. Wilentz is a MacDowell fellow, the former Jerusalem correspondent for
The New Yorker, and a long-time contributing editor at
The Nation. She is also a contributing editor at
The Markaz Review, an online publication about Middle Eastern culture, politics, diaspora, and art. She has written for
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
The Los Angeles Times,
Politico,
The London Review of Books, the
Los Angeles Review of Books, and many other publications. She teaches in the Literary Journalism program at the University of California at Irvine. This collection consists of research material on Haitian politics, the treatment of Haitian migrant workers in the Dominican Republic, and U.S. foreign policy towards Haiti; this material was compiled for the writing of
The Rainy Season: Haiti since Duvalierr, published in 1990. Also included are printed matter of Haitian grassroots organizations written in Creole, and several addresses by U.S. Ambassador Brunson McKinley.
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