Ted Genoways (born April 13, 1972)[1] is an American journalist and author. He is a contributing writer at Mother Jones and The New Republic, and an editor-at-large at Pacific Standard. His books include This Blessed Earth and The Chain: Farm, Factory, and the Fate of Our Food.
He has been hailed by the Minneapolis Star-Tribune as a "marvelous poet"[2] and by The Times Literary Supplement as a "tenacious scholar."[3] He is the author of two books of poems and the literary history Walt Whitman and the Civil War, which, the Richmond Times-Dispatch wrote, "fills in a major gap in previous biographies of Whitman and rebuts the canard that Whitman was unaffected by the war and the run-up to it."[4] His awards include fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Guggenheim Foundation, and inclusion in the Pushcart Prize Anthology and Best American Travel Writing. He was editor of the Virginia Quarterly Review from 2003 to 2012, during which time the magazine won six National Magazine Awards.
Genoways' first book, a collection of poems entitled Bullroarer: A Sequence, was a narrative his grandfather "from his birth in a poor rural family to his work in the Omaha stockyards to his final years."[2]Marilyn Hacker, who selected the book for the 2001 Samuel French Morse Poetry Prize, wrote in the book's introduction: "Perhaps it says something about the movement of American poetry that the stockyards and slaughterhouses choired in operatic open form by Carl Sandburg are rendered (a word that takes on another meaning in one poem) by Ted Genoways in a metered verse that spares the reader no detail. There is no romance to the blood and heat and animal terror communicated to workers (and readers) as it emanates from the killing floors of the Omaha meatpacking industry."[11]
In October 2014, Genoways published the book The Chain: Farm, Factory, and the Fate of Our Food, which Eric Schlosser in the New York Times Book Review called an "important book, well worth reading, full of compelling stories, genuine outrage and the careful exposure of corporate lies."[14]
In September 2017, Genoways published This Blessed Earth: A Year in the Life of an American Farm Family, which Arlo Crawford in the New York Times Book Review called "a cleareyed and unsentimental look at how farming has become relentlessly optimized by automation, markets and politics; factors that don’t always take into account the guy who’s actually driving the tractor."[15]This Blessed Earth was the Nebraska Center for the Book's One Book One Nebraska selection, but Governor Pete Ricketts refused to sign the customary proclamation calling on citizens to read the book on the grounds that the This Blessed Earth, is written by a "political activist" and the story was "divisive."[16][17]
According to Publishers Weekly, his next book Tequila Wars: José Cuervo and the Bloody Struggle for the Spirit of Mexico is scheduled to be edited by John Glusman at Norton. Tequila Wars aims to "tell the story of the modern tequila industry."[18]
Bibliography
Nonfiction
Walt Whitman and the Civil War: America's Poet During the Lost Years of 1860-1862, University of California Press, 2009, ISBN978-0-520-25906-5
The Chain: Farm, Factory, and the Fate of Our Food, HarperCollins, 2014, ISBN978-0062288776
This Blessed Earth: A Year in the Life of an American Farm Family, W. W. Norton, 2017, ISBN978-0-393-29257-2
Tequila Wars: José Cuervo and the Bloody Struggle for the Spirit of Mexico, W.W. Norton, 2025, ISBN978-0393292596
As editor
A Perfect Picture of Hell: Eyewitness Accounts by Civil War Prisoners from the 12th Iowa (co-editor), University of Iowa Press, 2001, ISBN978-0-87745-759-6
Hard time: voices from a state prison, 1849-1914, Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2002, ISBN978-0-87351-434-7
Walt Whitman: The Correspondence, Volume VII, Iowa, 2004, ISBN978-0877458913