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Tom Bissell

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Tom Bissell is an American journalist, critic, and writer best known for his extensive work as a writer of video games, including The Vanishing of Ethan Carter, Battlefield Hardline, and Gears 5. His work has been adapted into films by Julia Loktev, Werner Herzog, and James Franco. Bissell studied English at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan. In 1996, when he was 22 years old, Bissell went to Uzbekistan as a volunteer for the Peace Corps. 

He was there for seven months before returning home. He worked as a book editor in New York City and edited, among other books, The Collected Stories of Richard Yates and Paula Fox's memoir Borrowed Finery. He is a frequent reviewer for The New York Times Book Review. Bissell's father served in the Marines during the Vietnam War alongside author and journalist Philip Caputo. The two remained friends during Bissell's childhood, and Caputo read Bissell's work and encouraged him in his early writing efforts.

Bissell has written for Harper's Magazine, Slate, The New Republic, and The Virginia Quarterly Review, where he is a contributing editor. While much of Bissell's magazine writing could be considered travel writing, his articles are more concerned with politics, history, and autobiography than tourism. As a journalist, he traveled to Iraq and Afghanistan during wartime.

Bissell's literary work has been recognized and highlighted at Michigan State University in their Michigan Writers Series. His book, in collaboration with Jeff Alexander, "Speak, Commentary," is a collection of fake DVD commentaries for popular films by political figures and pundits such as Noam Chomsky, Dinesh D'Souza, and Ann Coulter. His other books have earned him several prizes, including the Rome Prize, the Anna Akhmatova Prize, and the Best Travel Writing Award from Peace Corps Writers. His journalism has been anthologized in The Best American Travel Writing and The Best American Science Writing.

In 2005, Pantheon published a collection of Bissell's short fiction; God Lives in St. Petersburg: and Other Stories. In the same year, his story "Death Defier" was published in the Best American Short Stories. His story "Aral" inspired Werner Herzog's 2016 film Salt and Fire.

In Extra Lives: Why Video Games Matter (2010), Bissell explored the subject of the video game industry. Part memoir, part genre criticism, the book features a profile of Gears of War series game designer Cliff Bleszinski, who had achieved celebrity-like status for the hit video game Gears of War, and a chapter on the appeal of games like Grand Theft Auto IV, including Bissell's own simultaneous struggles with addiction to video games and cocaine. 

Many of the book's essays were written on assignment by established publications such as The Observer and The New Yorker. They argued the importance of video games as a cultural and social movement. That year, Bissell was recognized as one of the video game industry's most influential voices, opening the door to more opportunities in video games. Bissell went on to write for many hit game franchises. In 2019, they would become the lead writer and an executive producer for an anthology television series based on the non-fiction book Masters of Doom based in the industry's early days.

Bissell wrote about the cult film The Room in a 2010 article ("Cinema Crudité") published in Harper's Magazine. In May 2011, he signed on to co-write (with actor Greg Sestero) a closer look at the film – the resultant book, The Disaster Artist, was published by Simon and Schuster in October 2013. It was later adapted into the feature film The Disaster Artist, directed by James Franco and released in 2017. The script adaption of the book was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay in 2017.

Bissell's story "Expensive Trips Nowhere" was filmed as The Loneliest Planet (2011). In 2021, he co-developed the television series The Mosquito Coast based on the novel of the same name.

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The Disaster Artist

James Franco
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