James Parker

James Parker is a staff writer at The Atlantic. Turned On, his 1998 biography of the punk-rock performer Henry Rollins, has been described as “breathlessly brilliant” (New Musical Express) and “a modern-day Pilgrim’s Progress” (Feed.com). He was previously a staff writer for the Boston Phoenix, where he won New England Newspapers and Press Association awards for his reporting on history and religious issues, and an ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for music criticism. In 2012, he was nominated for a National Magazine Award for his columns at The Atlantic. In 2017–18 he was the Institute of Liberal Arts journalism fellow at Boston College. Since 2011, Parker has been running the Black Seed Writers Group—a weekly writing workshop for homeless, transitional, and recently housed writers–and editing The Pilgrim, a literary magazine from the homeless community of downtown Boston.

Latest

  1. The James Bond Trap

    Ian Fleming created the superspy—and then couldn’t get rid of him.

    Against a red backdrop, a silhouette of James Bond with black-and-white photo of the author Ian Fleming inside
    Illustration by Paul Spella. Sources: Express Newspapers / Getty; Fototeca Gilardi / Getty.
  2. The Tyranny of Stuff

    The letters of Seamus Heaney reveal that he was bedeviled by the same problem that overwhelms all of us.

    Heaney in thought
    Phil Fisk / Camera Press / Redux