Amy Schiller is a journalist, academic, and consultant. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow at Dartmouth College in the Society of Fellows. She previously held fellowships at Stanford University and Bard College. Her writing has been published in The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The Nation, and The Daily Beast and has been quoted as an expert on philanthropy in The New York Times, The New Yorker, Bloomberg, and Slate. She has also had a nearly 15-year career in major gift fundraising consulting. She has worked in a wide range of settings, from international humanitarian nonprofits to a major New York City dance company.
"""Schiller presents a hopeful vision of philanthropy and society...Thoughtful, timely reading, both intelligent and humane."" —Kirkus Reviews ""Clear-headed, impassioned and lively ... [an] articulate, knowledgeable take on a complex subject. What makes it so entertaining are the well-chosen examples and the humor that inflects, whenever possible, the author's earned indignation."" —Phillip Lopate, author of Getting Personal ""In The Price of Humanity, Amy Schiller takes an unpromising subject and infuses it with passion, warmth, and humor. She does so by putting pressure on the '-anthropy' in 'philanthropy.' What does it mean to live a human life, she asks—is bare survival enough, or does it require something more expansive—and what does it mean to make one possible for others? In so doing, she implicitly illuminates the 'phil-' part, too. How can we love humanity in a way that honors our own? This book provides a pithy, personable guide.""—William Deresiewicz, author of Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life ""This is a magical book. It takes philanthropy out of the hands of the Gates Foundation and the Effective Altruists and restores it to its original purpose: love of humanity. It is an enthralling experience, made all the more by Amy Schiller’s distinctive voice: wise, skeptical, delighted, hilarious, grounded, joyous, sharp, and shrewd, so much in love with the humanity, and the individuals, who move across her pages and, thanks to her narrative art, step into our lives.""—Corey Robin, author of The Reactionary Mind: Conservatism from Edward Burke to Donald Trump"