Investigative journalist and New York Times bestselling author Craig Pittman has covered Florida for 30 years. In The State You’re in: Florida Men, Florida Women, and Other Wildlife, which features a selection of his columns for the Tampa Bay Times, he writes about the state’s oddest wildlife and its quirkiest people – and vice versa. In The Thing about Florida: Exploring a Misunderstood State, native son Tyler Gillespie faces his Florida denial and takes readers on an exuberant search for the state behind the caricatures, cutting through the media storm with curiosity and humor to find a place of hopes, dreams, and second chances.
In Conversation: On The State You’re in: Florida Men, Florida Women, and Other Wildlife & The Thing About Florida: Exploring a Misunderstood State
In Conversation: On The State You’re in: Florida Men, Florida Women, and Other Wildlife & The Thing About Florida: Exploring a Misunderstood State
Craig Pittman
Craig Pittman is a journalist, bestselling author, and native Floridian. His earlier nonfiction books about the Sunshine State include Cat Tale: The Wild, Weird Battle to Save the Florida Panther; Oh, Florida! How America’s Weirdest State Influences the Rest of the Country; The Scent of Scandal: Greed, Betrayal, and the World’s Most Beautiful Orchid (nothing like a gardening crime!); and Manatee Insanity: Inside the War Over Florida’s Most Famous Endangered Species. He is also the co-author of Paving Paradise: Florida’s Vanishing Wetlands and the Failure of No Net Loss. Pittman reported on environmental issues for the Tampa Bay Times for 30 years and now writes for the Florida Phoenix. In The State You’re in: Florida Men, Florida Women, and Other Wildlife (University Press of Florida), he shares a selection of his columns for the Times and other outlets about the state’s oddest wildlife and its quirkiest people. Included is a love story involving the most tattooed woman in the world, a deep dive into the professional mermaid industry, and an investigation of a battle between residents of a nudist resort and the U.S. Postal Service. Many of these stories are funny, some are serious, all are fascinating. Janine Farver, former executive director of the Florida Humanities Council, called Pittman “that rare breed of writer who not only makes us laugh but also makes us think.”
Gillespie, Tyler
Tyler Gillespie was once embarrassed to call Florida home, making up stories he’d been born somewhere else. In The Thing about Florida: Exploring a Misunderstood State (University Press of Florida) the Sunshine State native faces his denial and takes readers on an exuberant search for the reality behind the caricatures. A gay man raised in a Southern Baptist home, he argues for the importance of understanding the diversity and complexity of Florida today. “It’s dangerous to meet our fears with fear,” he writes of confronting his own as well as the state’s monsters – invasive species, hurricanes, and environmental destruction among them – and ultimately finds Florida’s humanity, a beautiful mix of hopes, dreams, and second chances.