Peter Elkind, senior reporter at ProPublica, is an award-winning investigative journalist and co-author of the national bestseller The Smartest Guys in the Room: The Amazing Rise and Scandalous Fall of Enron and Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer. He has written for The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, and the Washington Post. He was also associate editor at Texas Monthly, and an editor of the Dallas Observer. Elkind has been a guest on numerous radio and television programs, including ""The Today Show,"" Nightline, CNN Newsnight, and The Charlie Rose Show. Elkind graduated from Princeton University in 1980 and now lives with his family in Fort Worth, Texas.
Praise for The Death Shift Intriguing. . . . A horrifying true-life medical thriller... --Publishers Weekly Gripping. . . . A remarkable journalistic achievement! --Newsweek Murder, madness, and medicine. . . . superb! --Library Journal Shocking. . . . true crime reporting at its most compelling. --Booklist Praise for The Smartest Guys in the Room: The Amazing Rise and Scandalous Fall of Enron Powerful and shocking. . . . filled with fascinating characters and anecdotes. --New York Times Book Review The best book about the Enron debacle to date. --BusinessWeek The authors write with power and finesse. Their prose is effortless, like a sprinter floating down the track. --USA Today Well-reported and well-written. --Warren Buffett Praise for Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer An absorbing account of Spitzer's improbable journey from New York rich kid to celebrated Wall Street scourge--to infamous Client No. 9 of the Emperor's Club. --Los Angeles Times The Eliot Spitzer story plays like a novel that might have been plotted by Theodore Dreiser and peopled with characters by Tom Wolfe. The governor of New York, aka 'Mr. Clean', aka 'the Sheriff of Wall Street', is transformed by a prostitution scandal into 'the Luv Gov' and 'Client 9.' The tireless reformer compared to Batman's alter ego, Bruce Wayne; the moralistic square, who carried a briefcase in junior high, finds his much ballyhooed future as a possible presidential contender smashed to pieces, and the word 'disgraced 'seemingly permanently stapled to his name like a Homeric epithet. --The New York Times Even if there weren't a prostitution thread, this would be a page-turner. Elkind's style is journalism at its best: well-reported but pared down, and full of colorful scenes. --Newsweek.com [Elkind] is a fantastic researcher who has used both his powers of persuasion and the freedom of information laws to full advantage. Readers are treated to the frantic e-mails of aides as they coped with Spitzer's foul-mouthed tirades and wild mood swings. The book also has the first interviews with the governor's favorite date from the Emperors Club prostitution ring. --Washington Post