Saul
Bellow, founding editor
University Professor and Professor of English
Boston University
B.A., Northwestern University
D.Litt. (hon.), Northwestern University
Professor Bellow has
taught at New York University, Princeton University,
the University of Minnesota, Northwestern
University, and Stanford University, among
others. Prior to his appointment at Boston
University, he was a member of the Committee
on Social Thought at the University of Chicago.
Professor Bellow's first novel, Dangling
Man, was published in 1944. Since then
he has written more than a dozen novels, along
with several short stories and plays. Professor
Bellow has received three National Book Awards
(for The Adventures of Augie March,
1953; Herzog, 1964; and Mr. Sammler's
Planet, 1971). He has received the Jewish
Heritage Award, the French Croix de Chevalier
des Arts et Lettres, and the Pulitzer Prize
(for Humboldt's Gift, 1975) In 1976
he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Some of his more recent publications are To
Jerusalem and Back (1976), The Dean's
December (1982), Him with His Foot
in His Mouth and Other Stories (1984),
More Die of Heartbreak (1987), A
Theft (1989), The Bellarosa Connection
(1989), It All Adds Up (1993), and
The Actual (1997).
 |
Keith
Botsford, founding editor
Professor of Journalism
Boston University
<personal
website>
AB, University
of Iowa
AM, Yale University
Professor Botsford has
been associated with film (MGM), television
(CBS/TV) and theater (Stratford Shakespeare
Festival). He is currently a columnist for
the Independent (London) and U.S. correspondent
for La Stampa (Turin). He has been assistant
to the president at the University of Puerto
Rico and Boston University and has taught
at Yale, Bard College, the University of Puerto
Rico and the University of Texas. A novelist,
he has published five novels under his own
name and eight others, as well as works of
nonfiction, under various pseudonyms. In addition
to being a professor of journalism, he is
a lecturer in both history and international
relations in the College of Arts and Sciences.
He is also a former editor-in-chief of Bostonia
magazine.