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Jonathan Freedland

Jonathan Saul Freedland
Jonathan Freedland, Journalist, Author and Broadcaster (8571240487).jpg
Freedland at Chatham House in 2013
Born (1967-02-25) 25 February 1967 (age 50)
Alma mater Wadham College, Oxford
Occupation Journalist
Spouse(s) Sarah Peters
Website jonathanfreedland.com
twitter.com/freedland
guardian.co.uk/profile/jonathanfreedland

Jonathan Saul Freedland (born 25 February 1967) is a British journalist, who writes a weekly column for The Guardian and a monthly piece for The Jewish Chronicle. He is also a regular contributor to The New York Times and The New York Review of Books, and presents BBC Radio 4's contemporary history series, The Long View.

He was named 'Columnist of the Year' in the 2002 What the Papers Say awards and in 2008 was awarded the David Watt Prize for Journalism, in recognition of his essay 'Bush's Amazing Achievement', published in The New York Review of Books. Freedland also writes best-selling thrillers, originally under the pseudonym Sam Bourne.

The son of Michael Freedland, a biographer and journalist, and Sara Hocherman, he was educated at University College School, a boys' independent school in Hampstead, London, and at Wadham College, Oxford.

The younger Freedland began his Fleet Street career at the short-lived Sunday Correspondent. In 1990 he joined the BBC, working as a news reporter across radio and television, appearing most often on The World at One and Today on Radio 4. In the summer of 1992, he was awarded the Laurence Stern fellowship on The Washington Post, serving as a staff writer on the national news section. He became Washington Correspondent for The Guardian in 1993, remaining in that post until 1997 when he returned to London as an editorial writer and columnist. Bring Home the Revolution: The case for a British Republic (1998), Freedland's first book, argued that Britain should reclaim the revolutionary ideals it exported to America in the 18th century, and undergo a constitutional and cultural overhaul. The book won a W. Somerset Maugham Award for non-fiction and was later adapted into a two-part series for BBC Television.


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