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Andrew Tobias

Andrew Tobias
Andrew Tobias 2016-03-27.jpeg
Andrew Tobias in 2016
Born (1947-04-20) April 20, 1947 (age 70)
Alma mater Harvard University
Occupation Author
Website andrewtobias.com

Andrew Tobias (born April 20, 1947) is an American writer. He has written extensively about investment, as well as politics, insurance, and other topics. He is also known for writing The Best Little Boy in the World, a 1973 memoir – originally pseudonymous – about life as a gay man. From 1999-2017 he was treasurer of the Democratic National Committee.

Tobias graduated from Harvard College in 1968 with a BA in Slavic languages and literature. In 1972, he obtained his Masters of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School.

While in business school, he wrote for New York Magazine, and after graduation became a contributing editor.

In 1973, Tobias wrote The Best Little Boy in the World, an autobiography in which he spoke of his experiences as a gay boy and young man. He published it under the pen name "John Reid" to avoid the repercussions of being openly gay; the book was republished in 1998 under his real name to coincide with a sequel, The Best Little Boy in the World Grows Up.

Although he has never held a job in the investment industry, he has written extensively on the subject, including The Only Investment Guide You'll Ever Need, The Only Other Investment Guide You'll Ever Need, My Vast Fortune, Money Angles, The Invisible Bankers: Everything the Insurance Industry Never Wanted You to Know, and The Funny Money Game. He parlayed his writings and advice into success in the software industry with his Andrew Tobias's Managing Your Money financial application.

Tobias books on other topics include Fire and Ice: The Charles Revson/Revlon Story, Getting By on $100,000 a Year, a collection of magazine pieces; Auto Insurance Alert, a book proposing radical insurance reform; Kids Say Don't Smoke on the efforts of tobacco companies to sell cigarettes to younger consumers (which was also published in Russian).

After leaving New York Magazine in 1976, he was a contributing editor to Esquire, then Playboy, Time, and Parade.


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