Michael Largo

Michael Largo, born in Staten Island (New York) in the fifties, is an American writer.

Early life

Born into a family of firefighters and police officers (both his grandfather that his father worked in the police department in New York), Largo has a maternal line descended from the first families Dutch who founded New Amsterdam (later New York).

Largo went to college on Staten Island and graduated in environmental science. He studied further in college in Brooklyn, with the poet John Ashbery, where he majored in English literature, winning the Whiteside Poetry Award.

Career

Later he moved to the East Village to focus on teaching, publishing articles in magazines and literary journals, also opening an art gallery. Largo also opened St. Marks Bar & Grill, from where he got the inspiration for his latest book: "Genius and Heroin: The Illustrated Catalogue of Creativity, Obsession and Reckless Abandon Through the Ages". This bar, originally a tavern active since the thirties, has become a meeting point for many artists, bohemians, as shown in the video of Rolling Stones called "Waiting on a Friend".

In the mid-eighties, Largo left New York to work on tugboats and other vessels, making the long lonely hours at the various ports to read the entire Encyclopædia Britannica (then admit that he has arrived "only" to the letter U). Later, he worked as an archivist at the company Allied Artists, continued to publish short stories and poems on magazines

In the early nineties, influenced by deaths close to him, Largo started studying the various causes of death in the United States. To obtain the information, he traveled throughout the country: this experience has culminated in the publication of Final Exits: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of How We Die, which won the Bram Stoker Award for non-fiction. Later he published The Portable Obituary: How the Famous, Rich, and Powerful Really Died.

After spending some years in Europe visiting the places where many brilliant minds have lived and eventually destroyed themselves, (resulting in the book Genius & Heroin), Largo moved near Atlanta.

Largo's work has been published and translated into twelve languages.

Awards and nominations

Largo received the Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in Nonfiction, 2006, for Final Exits: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of How We Die.

The Portable Obituary was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award.

Personal life

Largo has been married three times, and has five children.

Bibliography

References

External links

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