Authors

Kevin Sack is a veteran journalist who has written about national affairs for more than four decades and has been part of three Pulitzer Prize-winning teams. A native of Jacksonville, Florida, and a graduate of Duke University, he spent thirty years on the staff of The New York Times, where he specialized in writing long-form narrative and investigative reports, often related to race. He has also written for the Los Angeles Times and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and his work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine. He was a 2019 Emerson Collective Fellow at New America.

On behalf of Kathy Robbins — The Robbins Office, Inc.

Hiroshi Fujiwara is Japan’s Cat Detective. He has spent the last 30 years investigating missing pets all over the country.

Represented by Annabel White.

Bruna De Luca grew up in a very Italian household in the Scottish Borders and reluctantly describes herself as a deep-fried pizza. This dual heritage is woven through every aspect of her life, from her studies at the University of Edinburgh, where she completed a dissertation on Italian fairy tales, to the years she spent living in Italy teaching students to speak English with a Scottish twang. Her writing is shaped by that in-between space, often exploring identity, belonging and life between cultures. She is the author of the YA novels Livia in Rome and Evie in Venice.

 

Represented by Thérèse Coen.

Yoko Inoue is a reporter and communications advisor, who spent 20 years working at The Yomiuri Shimbun, one of Japan’s leading national newspapers. Yoko Inoue speaks fluent English and lives in Copenhagen. She is open to publicity, interviews and events.

 

Represented by Annabel White

Gloria Steinem is a writer, political activist, and feminist organizer. She was a founder of New York and Ms. magazines, and is the author of An Unexpected Life, The Truth Will Set You Free, But First It Will Piss You Off, My Life on the Road, Moving Beyond Words, Revolution from Within, and Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions, in addition to many collections and essays. She co-founded the National Women’s Political Caucus, the Ms. Foundation for Women, the Free to Be Foundation, and the Women’s Media Center in the United States. As links to other countries, she helped found Equality Now, Donor Direct Action, and Direct Impact Africa.

For her writing, Steinem has received the Penney-Missouri Journalism Award, the Front Page and Clarion awards, the National Magazine Award, the Lifetime Achievement in Journalism Award from the Society of Professional Journalists, the Society of Writers Award from the United Nations, and the University of Missouri School of Journalism Award for Distinguished Service in Journalism. In 1993, her concern with child abuse led her to co-produce an Emmy Award–winning TV documentary for HBO, Multiple Personalities: The Search for Deadly Memories. She and Amy Richards co-produced an Emmy nominated series of eight documentaries on violence against women around the world for VICELAND in 2016. She is the subject of Julie Taymor’s biopic, The Glorias, released in Fall 2020 and was featured in Dear Ms., released on HBO in 2025.

Among many tributes and honors for her activism, in 2013 she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama and in 2019, she received the Freedom Award from the National Civil Rights Museum. For her boundless commitment to feminism, and for including all voices in the name of equality, Gloria was the 2021 recipient of the Princess of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities.

Mireille Guiliano is the bestselling author of French Women Don’t Get Fat and French Women For All Seasons. Born and raised in France, she is married to an American and lives most of the year in New York and Paris. She is the former President and CEO of Clicquot, Inc.

On behalf of Kathy Robbins, and The Robbins Office, Inc. 

Patricia Morrisroe was selected by renowned photographer Robert Mapplethorpe to write his biography Mapplethorpe: A Biography, and was for many years a contributing editor to New York magazine. Morrisroe has written for numerous other publications, including Vanity FairVogue, and The New York Times. In 2010, she wrote Wide Awake: A Memoir of Insomnia, which blended science, culture, and personal insight to tell the story she shares with forty million other Americans about not being able to sleep at night. With her husband, Lee, she divides her time between a noisy apartment in New York City and a relatively quiet house in Westchester County.

On behalf of Kathy Robbins, and The Robbins Office, Inc. 

Dr. Laurent Fogel spent 10 years as an emergency room doctor before turning his attention to the underlying causes of many illnesses and becoming a leading specialist of anti-ageing medicine, on the forefront of nutritional and integrative medicine.

June Cohen is a pioneer in media and technology, best known for her work launching TED Talks, Masters of Scale, and Wired’s pioneering website HotWired.com. She’s earned 100+ industry awards for her work, including 67 Webby honors, 8 Apple “Podcast of the Year” Awards, a National Design Award and a Peabody.

On behalf of Authors Equity.

Basil Mori is the author of three books. He was born in Miyazaki Prefecture and is a graduate of Kyushu University. His debut, Know It All, published in 2023 and won the 30th Matsumoto Seicho Prize. His second book Why Is There A Dead Body in the Studio? published in 2024. The Koishi Detective Agency is his most recent book.