Charles Hirshberg is an American journalist and sportswriter. He primarily writes for large-circulation magazines. His articles and columns have appeared in Time, Sports Illustrated, Life, the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, Men's Health and other publications. As of 2002, he was an editor of Popular Science. His mother was the astrophysicist Joan Feynman and his uncle was Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman.[1]

Bibliography

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Hirshberg is the author of several books:

  • Hirshberg, Charles; Berman, Chris (2004). ESPN : a salute to mind-bending, eye-popping, culture-morphing highlights. New York: ESPN Books. OCLC 1035891077.
  • Hirshberg, Charles (2007). Elvis remembered : 30 years later. New York: Time Home Entertainment. ISBN 9781933821863. OCLC 819408398.
  • Zwonitzer, Mark; Hirshberg, Charles (2014). Will You Miss Me When I'm Gone?: The Carter Family and Their Legacy in American Music. Riverside: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781439127445. OCLC 1085227911.
  • Hirshberg, Charles; Jerome, Richard; Russell, Lisa (September 8, 2017). Glen Campbell : A Life in Song, 1936-2017. Time Inc. Books. ISBN 9781547840588. OCLC 1005826155.

References

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  1. ^ Katharine Q. “Kit” Seelye (September 10, 2020). "Joan Feynman, Who Shined Light on the Aurora Borealis, Dies at 93". The New York Times. Retrieved September 13, 2020. She graduated from Oberlin in 1948, the year she married Richard Hirshberg, also a scientist, whom she had met there; they separated in 1974 and later divorced. She married Mr. Ruzmaikin in 1992. In addition to him and her son Charles, she is survived by another son, Matthew; a daughter, Susan Hirshberg; and four grandchildren. Her brother died in 1988 at 69.