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Susan Orlean

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Susan Orlean is a journalist, television writer, and bestselling author of The Orchid Thief and The Library Book. She has been a staff writer for The New Yorker since 1992 and has contributed articles to many magazines, including Vogue, Rolling Stone, Esquire, and Outside. In 2021, Orlean joined the writing team of the HBO comedy series How To with John Wilson. However, she is best known as the author of the 1998 book The Orchid Thief, adapted into the film Adaptation (2002). Meryl Streep received an Academy Award nomination for her performance as Orlean.

Orlean has published stories in Rolling Stone, Esquire, Vogue, Outside, and Spy. In 1982, she became a staff writer for the Boston Phoenix and later a regular contributor to the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine. Her first book, Saturday Night, was published in 1990, shortly after she moved to New York City from Boston and began writing for The New Yorker magazine. She started contributing to The New Yorker in 1987 and became a staff writer in 1992.

Orlean authored the book The Orchid Thief, a profile of Florida orchid grower, breeder, and collector John Laroche. The book formed the basis of Charlie Kaufman's script for the Spike Jonze film Adaptation. Orlean (portrayed by Meryl Streep, who won a Golden Globe for the performance) was, in effect, made into a fictional character. The movie showed her becoming Laroche's lover and partner in a drug production operation in which orchids were processed into a psychoactive substance.

She also wrote the Women's Outside article "Life's Swell," published in 1998. That article, a feature on a group of young surfer girls in Maui, was the basis of the film Blue Crush. In 1999, she co-wrote The Skinny: What Every Skinny Woman Knows About Dieting (And Won't Tell You!) under her married name, Susan Sistrom.

She previously published magazine stories compiled in two collections, The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup: My Encounters with Extraordinary People and My Kind of Place: Travel Stories from a Woman Who's Been Everywhere. She also served as editor for Best American Essays 2005 and Best American Travel Writing 2007. In addition, she contributed to the Ohio chapter of State By State (2008), and in 2011 she published a biographical history of the dog actor Rin Tin Tin titled Rin Tin Tin: The Life and the Legend.

When Orlean's son had a school assignment to interview a city employee, he chose a librarian. Together, they visited the Studio City branch of the Los Angeles Public Library system, which reignited her childhood passion for libraries. After an immersive project involving three years of research and two years of writing on the 1986 fire at the Los Angeles Central Library, The Library Book was released in October 2018.

The book uses the context of the April 1986 fire to explore the public library's role, who uses them, and the void created if they are lost. Orlean hired a fact-checker to ensure the book was accurate, explaining, "I don't want a substantial error that changes the meaning of my book, but I also don't want silly errors." She collaborated on the adaption for television. In 2021, Orlean joined the writing staff of the television series How To with John Wilson for the show's second season on HBO.

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The Library Book

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