| Nina Burleigh | |
|---|---|
| Born | Chicago, Illinois |
| Nationality | American |
| Occupation | Author and journalist; adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University |
| Spouse | Erik Freeland |
| Children | Two children |
| Parents | Robert Burleigh (author) |
| Website | |
| www.ninaburleigh.com | |
Nina Burleigh is an American writer and journalist. She is the author of five books, including Mirage: Napoleon's Scientists and the Unveiling of Egypt (2007), about the scholars who accompanied Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798; Unholy Business (2008), about a Biblical archaeological forgery case; and The Fatal Gift of Beauty (2011), about the overturned conviction of American student Amanda Knox, who was tried in Italy in 2009 for the murder of Meredith Kercher.
Burleigh is an adjunct professor of journalism at Columbia University, a contributing editor to Elle, and an occasional blogger at The Huffington Post. She has also been a staff writer at People magazine in New York.[1] She has contributed to numerous magazines and newspapers, including Time magazine,[2] The New York Times,[3] The New Yorker,[4] and The Washington Post, as well as websites such as TomPaine.com, AlterNet and Salon.com.
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In a 1998 essay for Mirabella, Burleigh described noticing that, while aboard Air Force One during her time as a White House correspondent for Time magazine, President Bill Clinton found her attractive. That same year, Howard Kurtz of The Washington Post reported her as saying of Clinton: "I'd be happy to give him [oral sex] just to thank him for keeping abortion legal."[8] Referring to the comment in a 2007 piece for The Huffington Post, Burleigh wrote, "I said it (back in 1998, but a good quote has eternal life) because I thought it was high time for someone to tweak the white, middle-aged beltway gang taking Clinton to task for sexual harassment. These men had neither the personal experience nor the credentials to know sexual harassment when they saw it, nor to give a good goddamn about it if they did. The insidious use of sexual harassment laws to bring down a president for his pro-female politics was the context in which I spoke."[9]
Burleigh has written about her visits to Iraq, her mother's country of birth, both as a child and later in life as a journalist.[10] Her father is author Robert Burleigh.[11] She is married to Erik Freeland, a photographer. They and their two children live in New York City.[12]
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