Moises Velasquez-Manoff
Moises Velasquez-Manoff has written extensively, mostly on science and environment, for The Christian Science Monitor. His work has also appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Chicago Tribune, Mother Jones, and the Indianapolis Star, among other publications. He holds a master of arts, with a concentration in science writing, from the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. He was born in NYC, raised in New Mexico, and educated in California. As a toddler, he jumped rope in the Lower East Side; as a kid, he frolicked in the mountain streams and desert shrub lands of northern New Mexico; as an adult, he swam the frigid Pacific. A long time ago, he was mysteriously bent on becoming a farmer, then a zoologist, and finally, as a young adult, he dreamed of writing novels. Instead he worked as an ice cream scooper, busboy, waiter, cook, bartender, and graphic designer, among other jobs, before gravitating to journalism. He lives in Berkley. An Epidemic of Absence is his first book. Moises’s landline: 510 280 3707