James B. Steele (born January 3, 1943) is an
American investigative journalist and author. With long with collaborator
Donald L. Barlett he has won two
Pulitzer Prizes, two National Magazine Awards and five
George Polk Awards during their thirty five years of service at the
Philadelphia Inquirer,
Time, and
Vanity Fair.
Steele was born in
Hutchinson,
Kansas and was raised in
Kansas City,
Missouri. He graduated from the
University of Missouri–Kansas City and began his career at the
Kansas City Times, where he covered politics, labor and urban affairs. In 1970 he joined the
Philadelphia Inquirer, where he would begin his collaboration with Barlett.
In a 1972 collaboration for
The Philadelphia Inquirer, Steele and Barlett pioneered the use of computers for the analysis of data on violent crimes. Twenty years later, they co-authored the series
America: What Went Wrong? for
The Inquirer, which was named as one of the 100 best pieces of journalism of the 20th century by the
New York University School of Journalism. Rewritten into book form,
America: What Went Wrong? became a No. 1 New York Times bestseller. It is one of seven books Steele and Barlett have published.
Barlett and Steele were hired by
Vanity Fair to be contributing editors on the understanding that they would contribute two articles each year. They were available for this new assignment after
Time determined that they had insufficient space for the time of long journalistic investigations. In 2007, Barlett and Steele were featured in the PBS documentary series,
Exposé: America's Investigative Reports, in an episode entitled "Friends In High Places."
Steele is married and has a daughter.
Books
Magazine articles
Category:American journalistsCategory:Investigative journalistsCategory:American political writersCategory:American non-fiction writersCategory:Philadelphia Inquirer peopleCategory:1943 birthsCategory:Living people