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Tom Zeller Jr.
American journalist (born 1969) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Thomas Zeller Jr. (born April 30, 1969)[1] is an American journalist who has covered poverty, technology, energy policy and the environment, among other topics, for a variety of publications, including 12 years on staff as a writer and editor at The New York Times. He has also held staff positions at National Geographic Magazine and The Huffington Post.
In 2013-2014, he was awarded a Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT.[2]
Zeller has won several awards for visual journalism and multimedia reporting from the Society of News Design and from the University of Navarra, Spain (Malofiej Awards), including prizes for a collection of essays and graphics lending historical context to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; an interactive reconstruction of the shooting of Amadou Diallo; and a multimedia documentary of a Louisiana plantation,[3] part of The Times's Pulitzer prize-winning "How Race Is Lived in America" series.[4][5]
In 2016, Zeller and Pulitzer-prizewinning science writer Deborah Blum launched a new digital science publication titled Undark Magazine. He currently serves as the publication's editor in chief.[6]
He is a co-editor and contributing author of the book A Tactical Guide to Science Journalism: Lessons From the Front Lines (Oxford University Press, 2022).[7] His debut book is The Headache: The Science of a Most Confounding Affliction—and a Search for Relief (Mariner, 2025).[8]
Zeller resides in Montana with his wife, Katherine Zeller.[9]
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