- His memoir about his cousin's death in Vietnam, "Remains: Non-Viewable", was highly acclaimed by many writers including Elmore Leonard.
- In 2018 he was honored with the prestigious Kieser Award for lifetime achievement in film and television from Humanitas Prize.
- Attended Princeton University, where he played freshman football, hockey and lacrosse.
- Earned seven Emmy nominations and won two Writers Guild Awards and two Humanitas Prizes.
- His final book, "Pieces of Tinsel", about his time in Hollywood, is set to be published in 2022.
- Mentored a number of acclaimed screenwriters including John Wells, Carol Flint, Lydia Woodward, Paris Qualles and Ann Donahue.
- His 1982 novel "The Weather Tomorrow" and 2016 memoir "Pieces of Glass - An Artoir" received critical praise.
- Was a visiting professor at Princeton and Claremont McKenna College and lectured at USC, UC Santa Barbara and the Lyndon Johnson and Bill Clinton presidential libraries.
- Grew up in Montclair, New Jersey.
- Youngest of four siblings.
- His senior thesis at Princeton became his first novel, it was about two women working on the 1968 presidential campaign.
- He served on the boards of the Firestone Library at Princeton, the Humanitas Prize, the Burchfield Penney Art Center and the Writers Guild Foundation.
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