Rachel Louise Snyder Wikipedia, Books, Age, Husband, Net Worth

We’ll talk about Rachel Louise Snyder in this article. She is a well-known journalist, author, and lecturer in America. She contributes to This American Life and All Things Considered, and she formerly worked as a foreign reporter for the public radio program Marketplace. She also covers domestic abuse. She shared an Overseas Press Award for a piece she wrote for This American Life with Ira Glass and Sarah Koenig.

The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, and Slate have all published her writing. She is from Chicago and has lived in London, Cambodia, and Washington, DC.

Read Below about Rachel Louise Snyder Wikipedia, Books, Age, Husband, Net Worth etc.

Rachel Louise Snyder Wikipedia

NameRachel Louise Snyder 
NicknameRachel Louise 
Birth NameRachel Louise Snyder 
Date Of BirthNot Known
AgeUpdate Soon
BirthplaceChicago
HometownLondon, Cambodia, and Washington, DC
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionJournalist
Zodiac SignNot Known
ReligionNot Known

Rachel Louise Snyder Physical 

HeightAverage
WeightNot Known
Eye ColorBlack
Hair ColorBlack
Shoe SizeNot Known

Rachel Louise Snyder Educational Qualifications

SchoolNot Known
College or UniversityNorth Central College and an M.F.A. from Emerson College
Educational DegreeB.A Graduated

Rachel Louise Snyder Family

FatherNot Known
MotherNot Known
Brother / SisterNot Known
ChildrenSon: Not Known
Daughter: Not Known

Rachel Louise Snyder Marital Status

Marital StatusMarried
Spouse NamePaul Burton
AffairsNot Inform about this

Rachel Louise Snyder Collection & Net Worth

Net Worth In Dollars1 Million
SalaryNot Known

Rachel Louise Snyder Social Media Accounts

InstagramClick Here
FacebookClick Here
TwitterClick Here
You TubeClick Here

Books List

  • WOMEN WE BURIED, WOMEN WE BURNED
  • NO VISIBLE BRUISES
  • What We’ve Lost is Nothing
  • FUGITIVE DENIM

Rachel Louise Snyder Wikipedia

What We’ve Lost is Nothing, No Visible Bruises: What We Don’t Know About Domestic Violence Can Kill Us, the novel What We’ve Buried is Women We Burned, the memoir Women We Buried, Women We Burned (May 23), and the nonfiction book Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of Global Trade are all written by Rachel Louise Snyder.  She was a 2021 Guggenheim Fellow, and her writing has been featured in the New Yorker, the New York Times magazine, the Washington Post, and on NPR. No Visible Bruises received the Sidney Hillman Book Award for Social Justice, the 2020 Book Tube Prize, the 2020 New York Public Library Bernstein Award for Excellence in Journalism, and the 2018 Lukas Work-in-Progress Award. 

It has been translated into other languages, including Russian, Mandarin, Korean, Japanese, Turkish, Spanish, Polish, Romanian, Hungarian, and others. In Taiwan, it was named the Best Book in Translation for 2021. The Los Angeles Times, Esquire, Amazon, Kirkus, the Library Journal, the Economist, and BookPage all called it one of the greatest books of 2019, while the New York Times listed it among the “Top Ten” novels of the year. It also garnered starred reviews from Kirkus, Book Riot, and Publishers Weekly. 

  No Visible Bruises was also a nominee for the Silver Gavel Award, the LA Times Book Award, the Kirkus Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. 

Snyder has visited sixty nations over the past 20 years, reporting on topics including human rights, gender-based violence, natural catastrophes, displaced people, and conflict. 

It has been translated into other languages, including Russian, Mandarin, Korean, Japanese, Turkish, Spanish, Polish, Romanian, Hungarian, and others. In Taiwan, it was named the Best Book in Translation for 2021. The Los Angeles Times, Esquire, Amazon, Kirkus, the Library Journal, the Economist, and BookPage all called it one of the greatest books of 2019, while the New York Times listed it among the “Top Ten” novels of the year. It also garnered starred reviews from Kirkus, Book Riot, and Publishers Weekly. 

  No Visible Bruises was also a nominee for the Silver Gavel Award, the LA Times Book Award, the Kirkus Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. 

Snyder has visited sixty nations over the past 20 years, reporting on topics including human rights, gender-based violence, natural catastrophes, displaced people, and conflict.

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